

Though what is Ultra HD Blu-ray? I assume it's Blu-rays bigger brother?ĮDIT: And look at that guys, we're on page 11 now. I thought the second one, while decent just wasn't as good as the first (usually the case). I'm just looking for feedback from the knowledgeable people on here. This idea is just in the early stages for me and could easily get benched. My wife may wish to watch things on her iPad if that's even possible but i'd only be interested in watching movies on a proper TV.
#Makemkv backup greyed out software
No ripping software as yet.Īs far as the movies goes, I would only be watching them on the TV in the living room (which is connected to the router via cat6 cable).
#Makemkv backup greyed out Pc
I have a Windows 7 64bit PC with 2 drives, 1 being a blu ray drive & the other a standard DVD drive. I'm ok with shelling out an initial cost but not an ongoing cost. I've read about possibilities of being able to access what is stored to this while you're away from your home, so i guess that must need to be connected to the router, although if that requires an ongoing subscription then that's a no-no for me. Can the average person hear the difference between 192 & 256 for example? I can once you start dropping down to 128 tbh. Not quite sure what bitrate i'd need to rip at to avoid loss. I'm not sure how many DVDs i have but i'm guessing it'll be in the 200-300 region and that's after getting rid of a load i wont watch again.Īnd then there's my music collection. I would also at the very least want to retain the option of subtitles (preferably the entire menu system including extras - so it'd be like having the disc, just on some sort of digital media). What i would want to do if i did back up digitally is back up the discs with NO LOSS of picture/sound quality whatsoever. Not to try make profit out of the discs as i don't think i'd let them go tbh. I've wondered recently about storing this stuff digitally. I've had to do the same with my albums also. It got to the stage where i had to get one of those 200 disc wallet things as the cases were taking up so much room.
#Makemkv backup greyed out mod
Id - attribute id, see AP_ItemAttributeId in apdefs.After briefly reading about this recently i've a feeling it'll be more suited to this forum rather than the hardware forum although if a mod disagrees then feel free to move it.īasically i have a lot of DVDs and a few blu ray discs.

Max - maximum possible value for a progress bar, constantĭRV:index,visible,enabled,flags,drive name,disc nameĮnabled - set to 1 if drive is accessibleįlags - media flags, see AP_DskFsFlagXXX in apdefs.h Progress bar values for current and total progress This string is localized and subject to change, unlike message code. Message - raw message string suitable for outputįormat - format string used for message. MSG:code,flags,count,message,format,param0,param1.Ĭode - unique message code, should be used to identify particular string in language-neutral way.įlags - message flags, see AP_UIMSG_xxx flags in apdefs.h Start streaming server with all output suppressed on a specific address and port: Makemkvcon backup -decrypt -cache=16 -noscan -r -progress=-same disc:0. Default: program preferences.Ĭopy all titles from first disc and save as MKV files into current directory:īackup first disc decrypting all video files in automation mode with progress output: Default: 51000.ĭecrypt stream files during backup. Default: none, UPNP server binds to the first available address and web server listens on all available addresses. These values will not change in future versions.Įnable or disable UPNP streaming. Some options make reference to apdefs.h file that can be found in MakeMKV open-source package, included with version for Linux. If you automate this program it is highly recommended to use this option. All strings are quoted, all control characters and quotes are backlash-escaped. All output is line-based and output is flushed on line end. Program will output more information in a format that is easier to parse. About 128 MB is recommended for streaming and backup, 512MB for DVD conversion and 1024MB for Blu-ray conversion.Įnables automation mode. By default program uses a huge amount of memory. Specifies size of read cache in megabytes. Helpful when other applications are already accessing discs in other drives.

Optionally saves to output file.ĭoncqt access any media during disc scan and do not check for media insertion and removal. Special file names: stdout, stderr, null.

Configuration options and setup keys are located in ~/.MakeMKV/
