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Iflicks 2 add image
Iflicks 2 add image











iflicks 2 add image
  1. Iflicks 2 add image movie#
  2. Iflicks 2 add image manual#
  3. Iflicks 2 add image full#
  4. Iflicks 2 add image code#

Frozen, for instance, took about 45 minutes to copy. (That's not to say it's fast, either it takes a while to copy and decrypt up to 50GB of data at Blu-ray speeds. The process of creating a backup doesn't take overly long (though it's dependent on drive speed), because the drive is just copying data to your Mac, and decrypting. So make sure you have a lot of free drive space, make sure you remove these backup copies when done with the conversion step, and if you make backups (you should!), make sure you exclude the folder that holds your raw Blu-rays from your backups.

iflicks 2 add image

( Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol was 44GB the much visually simpler and shorter So I Married An Axe Murderer was "only" 21GB.)

Iflicks 2 add image movie#

The extras disc for The Hobbit: Desolation of Smaug, as seen at right, takes up 15GB of drive space in backup form-and the extras only run 37 minutes! A long complex movie with a dual-layer Blu-ray can easily approach 50GB. (They also include everything on the disc, i.e. Warning: Because you're merely copying the contents of the Blu-ray without changing its compression or format, the resulting files can be very large. Make sure you check the "Decrypt video files" box, and then click the ugly folder icon to set the path to where you'd like the file to be saved. If you're interested in creating your own digital copies of your Blu-ray discs, read on to see how I do it.īefore we begin, the obligatory disclaimer: Kirk focused on playback I'm ignoring playback, and expanding on the ripping tutorial.) ( Kirk McElhearn discussed Blu-ray viewing/ripping for Macworld last year.

iflicks 2 add image

Which means I need to make my own digital versions.įor DVDs, this isn't too troublesome (and well documented), but I'm only buying Blu-ray discs now, and that makes things a bit tougher.

iflicks 2 add image

More and more, in fact, this is the norm. Other studios, though, want to force me outside the Apple ecosystem, and into the hell that is Ultraviolet.

Iflicks 2 add image code#

The recent Frozen Blu-ray release, for example, was perfect: In the box was a Blu-ray, a DVD, and an easy-to-use redemption code for the iTunes digital version. But I also enjoy the benefits that come from having an electronic version of the movie. So it’s pretty awesome, I’m just not sure if it’s $40 worth of awesome.As I recently wrote about, I'm weird in that I prefer to buy my movies on physical media, versus electronic only. The real upside was that there was no transcoding required, everything just copied across to iTunes and is working beautifully on the iPhone, so the time I save in transcoding is way way way more than the time it takes me to clean up the file names. It appears to be a common problem that these meta data adding tools have, they all want to use the DVD cover artwork, which looks pretty in iTunes but doesn’t display at all on the iPhone which seems to demand a square image When it comes to artwork I did have to manually replace everything, even if it did find artwork.

Iflicks 2 add image full#

Those that failed to get details seemed to use the full file name as the title, which I had to correct manually. Some got the episode screen date and description. It was a bit strange really, I was pulling through Blackadder and some episodes were getting artwork, all seemed to get the correct show name, series number and episode number (although that could be down to my very neat file labelling?).

Iflicks 2 add image manual#

IFlicks took a bit of manual tinkering to clean up the files. I’ll have to have a look at that one too.













Iflicks 2 add image