I personally use bit-ripper with xvid codec.
Yes it takes about 2-2.5 hours. but like what was mentioned before.Would you rather a movie take up 4+Gbs of space or less than 1Gb at almost the same quality?
You can set daemon tools (Which does not have issues in win7) to when a file is clicked it auto mounts the file. That would make it easier on your family. If you use a MCE (media center extender) you cannot watch your iso files over it, were the .avi files you can.
It all comes down to personal preference, space, usability,time, and of course the user.
McKillWasHere
The problem is the almost same quality, as you mentioned.
With a DVD versus a RIP, I get true quality (not talking HD or BD, either, just plain old DVD). I can pick up about 6 different Video formats, all of which I have used to watch, say, my disc 3 of Battlestar Galactica Season 3 series - and every single one of them showed discoloration or else pixelation when watched at full screen on my 1680 x 1050 wide screen monitors. If I were to watch it on a large digital TV, the discrepancies would be even more readily obvious.
I have a very high quality Dark Knight in the MKV container - an it still shows problems every once in a blue moon, (or in very specific scene transitions) that I never saw watching it 3 different times in the movie theater. As I don't have a BD player yet, I cannot compare what my original BD looks like on this monitor, but I had a friend of mine rip it for me - it is large, at 14 GB, but still not up to quality of the original as seen on his BD player and monstrous 36" monitor.
Just as there are audiophiles (of which I am one) that cannot stand anything below a 320 bitrate for MP3s an prefer lossless codecs to lossy, there are those of us who prefer as near perfect visual entertainment as well (Visuophiles?). And, seeing as I have 1.25 TB of space, I can afford to keep movies on my system, deleting them an recreating the ISOs on the fly - I almost always abhor ripping, b/c I am very critical of the cinematography as it is, and imperfections from ripping only server to raise my gorge.
so I've backed my purchased dvd's to disk saving to an ISO but WMP cannot play. What do I need to do? I can always use VLC but it seems messy.
Curious what Microsoft suggests as far as workflow as the need to play your dvd's that you have purchased and copied to hard drive is fundamental to a media center.
I can do it with Boxee and the interface is fantastic.
please help!
Just rip the dvd to a folder not ISO and any player can play the DVD content from there, WMP also.
You're suggesting something that is out of scope and has been suggest more than once already in this thread - please keep the discussion topical - the OP wants to mount and play the ISO and is not interested in ripping.
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