![]() ![]() But despite that, it’s a tastefully designed deck in the classic Pioneer style, with a brushed finish and a low button count on the fascia. This version strips away a few of the BDP-450’s features, allowing budget buyers to sample Pioneer’s hi-def video prowess.Īt 58mm high, the deck itself is much slimmer than the 90mm BDP-450 and build quality isn’t quite up to the same standard, with a front panel made of plastic as opposed to aluminium. I shall post my results here once I know if this will work or not.The BDP-150 is the cheaper little brother of the BDP-450, a Blu-ray player aimed at those more interested in movie playback and build quality than flashy web portals and fitness apps. As a temporary work around I am reripping a DVD, this time dumping everything streight to a directory instead of making an ISO and I am going to tell K3B to burn it as a video DVD by hand. This makes me wonder if K9copy is making a bad ISO, or if K3B is just burning it as a data DVD. When I put that ripped DVD in it, it gave me a “Unsupported Disk” error and then the file browser came up, I was able to see that it had the correct directories on it, VIDEO_TS and AUDIO_TS but the VIDEO_TS directory seemed empty. What made me come to this conclusion is that they newer DVD player I tried is designed to work with Divx movies and MP3 disks, and it has a file browser in it. Computers can read the data DVD and see that there is a movie on it and play the movie from the DVD just fine, but this is not what home DVD players are expecting which makes them give the error of “Unsupported Disk” or just “Error”. The reason why the ripped DVDs will work in computers but not in normal DVD players is because they seem to but burnt, or the ISO is made, as a data DVD. By the way, I have read that DVD Shrink will work under wine, but I have never tried it.Īfter testing a ripped DVD and using a different DVD player, this one is newer, I think I found an important missing peace of this puzzle. Although I have never tried any of the Windows ones like DVD Shrink. Hopefully we can work this out, because in my opinion k9copy works way easier than any of the other ones I tried. Which brings me to another idea, I think the 2.0.2 version is a kde4 version, so I assume you are using kde4, you can try switching to a kde3 or even gnome session and see if anything is different there. You could try removing the configuration files for k9copy from ~/.kde/share/config/k9copyrc and ~/.kde/share/config/K9Copy. Other than that, I sort of lost on what else to do. What options do you have on the configuration page for DVD? I have the following unchecked What size were the iso images? Were they the full 4.3 GB of a single layer DVD? ![]() So, are you saying that it only happens with k9copy, but other programs using the same discs are fine? I figured, but thought we should check the obvious first. Actually, now that I think about it, I can’t remember which way I had to change it, I only do the full disc since I think the quality difference is negligible and it seems to work so much better.Īnyways, make sure you are selecting the DVD copy button, not the MPG4 button, try checking/unchecking the dvdAuthor option, or try copying the entire disc rather than just the movie. I don’t think it is set by default, but I remember having problems until I checked it, or unchecked it. There will be a checkbox for this option. You can select this by clicking on the configure k9copy button and then the DVD button. The first thing I can think of is that you are clicking on the MPG4 button instead of the DVD one.Īre you selecting the whole disc to copy, or just the audio and video title for the movie? ie, you are not copying any of the extra features or menus? If so, I had some problems doing that until I selected “use dvdAuthor for copy without menus” in the configuration for DVD. At least on mine as well, the MPEG-4 encoding options is always there, whether I am ripping to xvid or copying to DVD. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |