Playing DVD rips from your computer on a TV works great if you're willing to dedicate a computer to your TV.
Or you could just use your laptop. Like I do.
Playing DVD rips from your computer on a TV works great if you're willing to dedicate a computer to your TV.
Or you could just use your laptop. Like I do.
But then you lose all the convenience of having ripped DVDs -- sit on your couch with your remote and turn it on. If you're going to have to plug in your laptop and dedicate it to watching a movie for a couple hours, you might as well just put the DVD in the slot.
...
Anyway, maybe plex will be able to handle DVD rip playback in the future. Also plex could be a bit more stable. I hade two or three crashes this weekend.
When that is fixed I am all in.
...
Is the future here already?
I just installed the new version of Plex and tried one of my DVDs that had stuttering playback and sound issues. It played like a charm!
So my setup will be:
- Dedicated Mac Mini with external FW HDD and plex installed.
- Complete DVD rips (no encoding) for all movies.
- Encoding of my TV shows. Babylon 5, X-files etc. One episode per file. Why? To get nice setup with all episode info in Plex.
When I do the encoding of TV shows I will use:
ripit -> handbrake -> subler (meta data)
If I have any subtitles I will burn those into the files.
Finally my dream setup!![]()
When I do the encoding of TV shows I will use:
ripit -> handbrake -> subler (meta data)
If I have any subtitles I will burn those into the files.
Nice. So for the movies you'll just play the DVD rips on your Mini?
My only advice on this process would be to check out iDentify2 instead of Subler to tag your TV episodes. iDentify2 allows for batch tagging and works especially well for tagging entire seasons--just load the files to be tagged and let it search for you--will lookup metadata from TVDB and Tagchimp (though accurate results are dependent upon good file naming). Very rarely do I have to make any changes to the results when tagging my TV shows.
I like Subler as well (use it to add subtitle files, modify individual fields) but iDentify2 will get the job done is a fraction of the time.
But why care about computer time if it costs little-to-no human time?Setting up a file to be encoded on Handbrake of course takes virtually no time. That's not what I was referring to. I'm talking about the time it takes to encode.
But why care about computer time if it costs little-to-no human time?
But why care about computer time if it costs little-to-no human time?
Yes. Through Plex I get that nice looking setup I want. Have you tried it? It should work just fine on your DVD rip setup. I only tested it with one DVD yet though. I will test more before committing to it.
I have an older computer myself (before core2duo, actually), which is why I set up the encoding to happen while I'm asleep or at work.Hi
In my case, I have an older iMac (core2 duo) and the encoding takes a lot of resources from my computer, so it is slower to use while encoding
My point is that it is such an insignificant step that it shouldn't be a consideration. Are you really going to rule out encoding, which removes the need to tie up your computer and run a cable across your room whenever you want to watch TV, just because you need to spend a few minutes setting up a Handbrake cue? Especially when encoding allows you to use an un-hacked aTV2, which is a lot more family-friendly and easier to operate from the couch?I have no idea what you are getting at. My original point was that encoding was an unnecessary step unless you were dead set on using something like Plex, Apple TV, or adding a movie to an iDevice. You seem hung up about the issue of time. That was never my point. Encoding my RipIt file is just an unnecessary extra step when connecting my Mac to a TV will work just fine. That's my point. End of story.
My point is that it is such an insignificant step that it shouldn't be a consideration. Are you really going to rule out encoding, which removes the need to tie up your computer and run a cable across your room whenever you want to watch TV, just because you need to spend a few minutes setting up a Handbrake cue? Especially when encoding allows you to use an un-hacked aTV2, which is a lot more family-friendly and easier to operate from the couch?
I want a fixed setup. Don't want to connect cables each time I want to watch something....
Hi,
Sorry for the long post.
I am a DVD movie collector who has been thinking of going digital, i.e. store my movies on an HDD, but still watch them on my TV.
I do not want to use media centers like boxee, because from what I read in forums they are not entirely solid. Like one product (forgot which) losing sound when fast forwarding and forcing a shutdown of the machine to resolve it.
I have already come accustomed to the "it just works" with apple after a few months of being a Mac owner, so I prefer no hacking and tweaking to make stuff work.
I want a fixed setup. Don't want to connect cables each time I want to watch something.
I have looked around for a while and have found a couple of options:
1. Apple TV
2. Mac Mini
Now... I have almost 1000 movies (yes, I have bought them all). It will be a long project to convert it all, but I'm not in a hurry. It's not like the discs will disappear.
Option 1
Apple TV would mean I would have to convert movies to a format to fit the apple TV. Easy with handbrake, but... I would then have to select 1 audio track and burn in the subtitles (correct me if I am wrong) into that one apple TV file. The biggest drawback would be that I cannot access the extra features/material and select audio tracks (commentary track , other languages). It feels like too much work for each movie if I would do multiple versions and also encode special features. I could do it for a few movies that I like to watch often, but not for the whole collection.
Also I would have to stream from another computer, minor drawback.
Option 2.
I simply rip the DVD to a HDD and use it from there. From the Mac Mini instead of an apple TV, that should work just fine. Sure the movie library will be huge, but once I have ripped all my DVDs (years in the future) storage will be super cheap. I'll just buy more storage as the project goes along.
The drawback with this would be that I have no visually nice setup of the movies. Browsing finder to find a movie... Feels... Not so "Apple-nice".
So, have I missed any options?
What can you recommend?
Sounds like a pretty good system. The only think I might suggest, is that you can OCR the original VOBSUB track using Subler and then take it into Jubler for translation correction. Not sure which is more hassle, correcting the timing or correcting spelling errors but I thought I would point out that option to you.Followup on my own post(s).
I have selected to go for Option 1, basically.
I rip and encode my DVDs and add them to my itunes movie library.
I have now learnt how to add srt subtitles with subler, so all my old region 1 DVDs now get swedish subs. Yay! (I have noted that I have to recode all the srts so far using Jubler, to get the proper timing. I suspect that is somehow related to the movie being 29,97fps when I encode them with handbrake.)
I also bought an external DVD drive since I have DVDs of two different regions.
Now here is the other part that I am satisfied with.
If the movie has some interesting special fetters I rip and encode those too.
I mark these special features as a TV-show with the name "Special Features". That way I can easily find the extras on my apple TV in the TV-show menu.
The only thing I have to figure out now is why the extras ("episodes" of my
"Special Features" show) are sorted in reverse alphabetical order when I view them through the apple TV...
Now, all this takes time. I like doing this. If you don't, I would recommend doing something less time-consuming.![]()
Sounds like a pretty good system. The only think I might suggest, is that you can OCR the original VOBSUB track using Subler and then take it into Jubler for translation correction. Not sure which is more hassle, correcting the timing or correcting spelling errors but I thought I would point out that option to you.
Hi All, I'm new to the forums but I need help. I read some people are able to play digital files greater than 2 gig. I recently created a Digital File of LOTR to be played on my IPAD2 and it came out to 3.8 Gig on medium settings. But I can not play the file anywhere. When I try it always says unknow file type. If I break the file up to files less than 2 gig - they play.
If it is possible to play a digital file greater than 2Gig please let me know how you are doing it.
Thank you !
Followup on my own post(s).
I have selected to go for Option 1, basically.
I rip and encode my DVDs and add them to my itunes movie library.
Now here is the other part that I am satisfied with.
If the movie has some interesting special features I rip and encode those too.
I mark these special features as a TV-show with the name "Special Features". That way I can easily find the extras on my apple TV in the TV-show menu.