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njr
8th March 2007, 08:28
Hi

I ripped a Blu Ray Movie to my hard disk with AnyDVD-HD, which worked a treat.

Can I write this back to a Blu Ray Disk for playback in a standalone Blu Ray Player. I know technically I can, but because of the encryption/key issues, will it play. I'm not sure what AnyDVD-HD does with the keys.

Thanks

freed0m
8th March 2007, 12:27
sorry for the n00b question... Which program did you used to rip Blu-Ray and can you share with us the process? I have AnyDVD-HD but are struggling with Clone DVD Mobile to save a Blu-Ray movie to my hard drive. Thank you.

DrinkLyeAndDie
8th March 2007, 12:34
sorry for the n00b question... Which program did you used to rip Blu-Ray and can you share with us the process? I have AnyDVD-HD but are struggling with Clone DVD Mobile to save a Blu-Ray movie to my hard drive. Thank you.

Right-click on the fox icon in your systray and you'll see "Rip Video HD HD DVD / Blu-Ray to harddisk...". For now that's the Slysoft method and it's freely part of AnyDVD HD. :)

freed0m
8th March 2007, 12:38
OMG! Thank you!! Thank you!! :clap:

Right-click on the fox icon in your systray and you'll see "Rip Video HD HD DVD / Blu-Ray to harddisk...". For now that's the Slysoft method and it's freely part of AnyDVD HD. :)

DrinkLyeAndDie
8th March 2007, 12:45
OMG! Thank you!! Thank you!! :clap:

Glad to help. Sometimes we overlook things and you are not the first to ask about this so don't feel alone. ;)

Charlie
8th March 2007, 12:49
Also clonedvd or clonecd or clonedvd mobile doesn't support HD or Blu Ray just yet.

mick2006
8th March 2007, 17:04
One thing I have been thinking about is whether or not one can use Roxio to burn blu ray titles to blu ray disc. DVDit Pro HD (a Roxio product) is capable of creating playable blu ray discs (this is a $600 program however). So, if this is in fact true, then theoretically I think it should be able to write a ripped movie to disc. This would be a problem with HD DVD due to the VC-1 codec, but most Blu Ray HD discs use MPEG 2, so it should work. I don't have a blu ray burner, but I would certainly be moved to get one if this procedure works.

njr
8th March 2007, 17:54
Hi

Just to follow up my previous post:

I ripped a BluRau movie to hard disk, using AnyDVD HD.
Then without AnyDVD loaded, I could play the movie from Hard Disk using WinDVD 8HD. I wrote the folder to a BluRay disk using Nero & the movie played from my Blu Ray writer via WinDVD WITHOUT AnyDVD loaded.

So, I guess that my written Blu Ray disk doesn't have any encryption or keys.

Does anyone know if this would play on a standalone Blu Ray Player or do disks in player have to have keys ?

Thanks all & hope Clone HD-DVD/Blu Ray is out soon !

mick2006
9th March 2007, 10:13
It sounds like you simply created a data blu ray disc. In other words, I would almost certainly think it will not play on a stand alone blu ray player.

Octavean
9th March 2007, 12:06
I posted this elsewhere recently but it seems applicable here too.


Dear valued customer,

thank you for your email and your interest in our software.

1. & 2.) Playback of HD DVD and BD movies will be possible with Nero ShowTime in one of the upcoming versions of Nero 7.5. Unfortunately we currently don't have any information as of when exactly this feature will be included.

3. & 4.) Burning of data HD DVDs and BDs is possible with the current version of Nero 7.

5. & 6.) The functionality to create and burn HD DVD and BD movies in high resolution will be added to Nero at a later date. We curently have no information about if this will be added to Nero 7.5 or only to a later version of Nero.

Should you have any other request, please don't hesitate to contact us again.

Best regards


So the short answer seems to be “no”, it likely will not work in a STB BD player because the disc it was written to was formatted as a data disc (not a movie disc). There are software packages that claim to be able to burn BD discs that should be playable in a BD STB player but those applications probably wouldn’t know what to do with the native files ripped from a BD or a BD in ISO form.

http://www.cyberlink.com/multi/products/main_3_ENU.html

In theory, you would have to wait for a burning application like Nero to support such burn capabilities or a conversion application that can convert the ripped native BD files to a HD format that will maintain the quality and then use a program that can import this file and burn it to a BD in movie format.

dadkins
9th March 2007, 13:51
Wait? For BD software?

http://img409.imageshack.us/img409/2731/bd2vi0.jpg

Octavean
9th March 2007, 14:19
I’m aware of the Ulead BD DiscRecorder 2.5 solution:

http://www.dslreports.com/speak/slideshow/17824471?c=1125031&ret=L2ZvcnVtL3JlbWFyaywxNzgyNDI1OA%3D%3D

As well as the Ashampoo solution:

http://www.dslreports.com/speak/slideshow/17824568?c=1125037&ret=L2ZvcnVtL3JlbWFyaywxNzgyNDI1OA%3D%3D

However, I am unaware of any such software being able to burn native ripped BD movie files to a disc in a format that would be seen as a movie disc.

Sup, dadkins that you,….its me Oct.:D

Charlie
9th March 2007, 14:20
Well if it is an on the fly ripper / decrypter couldn't you use either and do a burn?

dadkins
15th March 2007, 18:22
Hey Oct!
Guess I'll have to break down and buy a blank and try not to burn a $20 coaster...

pedro206
18th August 2008, 14:08
Firstly Id Like To Confirm That Yes ! You Can Rip A Blu-ray Then Burn It Back On A Blu-ray Disc That Plays In A Standalone Bd Player , Ive Now Done 7 Of Them And Are All Working Fine , 4 Of Them Where Bd 25gig
So I Put The Whole Lot Back On A Disc And Menu Special Features All Work , All You Need Do Is Write The Bdmv And The Certificate Folder To A Udf 2.50 Image Then Burn Back To A Bd 25gig Disc Then Your Done.
For Discs That Are 50gig You Need To Remux The Main M2ts File Located In The Bdmv\stream ( Its About 22 Gig ) Open, Then Take All Pgs (aka Sub Files) Out Plus Audio Languages You Dont Want ,then Select Create Blu-ray Disc , Then Start Muxing , It Then Creates The Bdmv And Certificate Folders Again , Then Write Them To A Udf 2.50 Burn On Disc !!!done 8)8)8)
Programes Tsmuxer Gui -- Img Burn And Of Course Anydvd Hd

Adbear
18th August 2008, 14:12
You are aware that the last post is 17 months old and that many of us have written hundreds of Blu-rays back to disc since then?

fast eddie
18th August 2008, 14:44
http://www.blu-ray.com/players/

The thing you have to be concerned about is if the type of Blu-ray player you choose will play the type of media you put the Blu-ray structure on.

EXAMPLE:

Will you Blu-ray player play DVD+R DL (BD-9) OR DVD+R (BD-5) if you player plays this type of media WITH A BLU-RAY STRUCTURE BURNED ON IT then you should have no problems building a Blu-ray structure on the media of your choice and play on a standalone player.

Check out the above web site and plug-in the options you want your Blu-ray player to have and see what Blu-ray players play DVD+R DL(BD-9) OR DVD+R (BD-5)
:D

fast eddie
18th August 2008, 15:27
Here is something else to consider if you choose to go the portable hi def route hardware Blu-ray players OVER the software players and media center computers.

1. It is getting harder and harder to find hardware standalone Blu-ray players that will play home made Blu-ray structure built on a BD-5 or BD-9 blank media, sure they will all play the commercial BD-ROM disks. I believe this is going to be a copy protection issue in the future.

2. So if you choose the portable hi def media route as I have chosen, now is the time to get your standalone hardware Blu-ray player while you can still get one that will play home made Blu-ray structure on a blank BD-5 or BD-9. They all can play on a BD-R (25gb)

:D

Adbear
18th August 2008, 18:11
Here is something else to consider if you choose to go the portable hi def route hardware Blu-ray players OVER the software players and media center computers.

1. It is getting harder and harder to find hardware standalone Blu-ray players that will play home made Blu-ray structure built on a BD-5 or BD-9 blank media, sure they will all play the commercial BD-ROM disks. I believe this is going to be a copy protection issue in the future.

2. So if you choose the portable hi def media route as I have chosen, now is the time to get your standalone hardware Blu-ray player while you can still get one that will play home made Blu-ray structure on a blank BD-5 or BD-9. They all can play on a BD-R (25gb)

:D
I don't find this to be the case, I'm finding that Blu-ray players are playing those kind of discs with no problems as long as they are authored properly.

Adbear
10th August 2010, 05:47
AnyDVD HD is not designed for compression, it's designed purely to remove the copy protection.