I'm currently using Leawo Prof. Media to rip discs that don't have subtitles (bought the lifetime upgrade a while ago) and MakeMKV for discs that do. I like that Leawo can set the codec and the wrapper -- it will do H.265 MKVs in addition to H.264/MP4 -- but subtitles get burned in if they're selected. MakeMKV allows for selectable subtitles and audio streams but it rips at max quality with no codec control. My dream would be to have an app that combines both but I've yet to find it. Or else another utility that can recompress the MakeMKV outputs while retaining the separate subtitle and audio streams. I have Handbrake but I don't know if it can do that.

I'd rather know how to download the codecs (mp3 flac etc etc) for Audex (ripper), is there a way to get them using the terminal? I have tried with the links available on ubuntu site but nothing happened.


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Be aware that a very large number of KDE libraries will also be dragged in as dependencies of audex, if these dependencies seem excessive to you consider installing an alternative CD ripper such as asunder which carries no KDE cruft...


This guide will walk you through the steps of configuring CDex (CD Ripper/Encoder). Yes, there are dozens of them and some believe Exact Audio Copy [EAC] is the world's best CD audio ripper. However, I chose CDex because it's a free open source program that's easy to use and you can rip and encode audio within the same program. No sense reinventing the wheel.


We'll rip your favorite songs from your favorite CDs, and encode those digital songs as high-quality MP3s, using LAME, the world's best MP3 encoder in this example.


However, you can compress them using other lossy/lossless audio encoders/compressors i.e. Monkey's Audio, Musepack's sub-band codec, proprietary Advanced Audio Coding [AAC], etc. As always the choice of encoder you use will depend on these factors:


- amount of disk space you have available...

- number of CDs you own

- how good your hearing is..

- quality of your audio hardware..

- type of music you listen to...

- format compatibility requirements..

- file restrictions, etc.

Perhaps you're familiar with digital photography. Files compressed with a lossless codec can be compared to the RAW file format, which also employs lossless compression. MP3s on the other hand can be compared to JPEGs, which offer various degrees of lossy compression.


It's a known fact that the human ear has difficulty detecting a soft note played immediately after a loud one [e.g. a quiet whisper following a loud shout]. The lossy encoder will see this and discard the bits representing soft notes immediately following loud ones. Decisions regarding encoding and compression involves a trade-off balancing 3 factors:


1. Audio fidelity/quality

2. File size [affects hard drive space and Internet transfer time]

3. Time [to encode/compress]


* For the most part I will focus on using the popular lossy format (MP3) using LAME since it offers good compatibility requirements, speedy encoding and small size.


I also use Windows XP and I like dBpoweramp CD ripper. The basic program is free to use but some useful features, like the LAME encoder, require payment. It does have a free trial period on the full features.

I dont know if it matters to you, but when(if) gappless playback becomes avalible if you want to use it, you need your files to have been made with the LAME codec. I dont know if it does LAME mp3 encoding, but Media Monkey is a great one for ripping and managing your files. You will however have to purchace the Gold edition eventually because you can only rip to Mp3 for the first 30 days.

I wanted to try Fraunhofer IIS Pro 3.4.0.0 because its revision date is 2004, and the Fraunhofer IIS Advanced version dates to 1999. I may be wrong here, but I want to believe 2004 Pro is the better product. It definitely has more compression options than 1999 Advanced. And for those of you interested, here is a link . . . www.free-codecs.com/download/K_Lite_Codec_Pack.htm

I have seen that the latest release of fre:ac (now 1.1.6) uses FLAC 1.3.3 codecs

The latest version of these codecs is 1.4.2

To update these codecs do I have to wait for a new version of fre:ac, or can I do it myself? If yes, how?

Thank you

v.

Hi,

Could anyone suggest an mp3 converter that i can use with Windows 95? I wanted to benchmark different CPUs with mp3 codecs, but i just cannot make LAME work in win'95 on 386. Maybe someone has LAME compiled under Win 95? Or maybe there is another tool to do that?

I also want to try to encode a MPEG4 or DivX video under Windows 95 for benchmarking purposes as well. I have been using DivX 4 and VirtualDub for that with no success so far either. VirtualDub opens a demo AVI file from Windows 98 disk, but it does not let me save it using DivX codec. It just crashes after i chose all the compression settings and click "Save" button.

MP4 is a container. It has video and audio codecs within that container. Roku devices support the MP4 container, but they have limited codec support. For video, the supported codecs are H.264, MPEG-2, and for 4K devices H.265. If your ripped files are using a different video codec, you get exactly what you are getting, audio but no video. You can use a program called MediaInfo to see what codecs are within your container.

The best program for ripping DVDs and Blu Ray discs is MakeMKV. It uses the MKV container, which Roku also supports. DVDs usually contain MPEG-2 video, so it's puzzling why your rip isn't working. But I need to know what codec is actually within your container to say where the issue is.

Without changing your current file, how can you play it? Emby is one solution, as is Plex. They will both transcode any unsupported codec or container so the Roku can play it. Both of those have dedicated apps for Roku devices. You can also use a DLNA server and use Roku Media Player. Serviio is the DLNA server I recommend (and I'm the author of the Roku profiles included in Serviio), but just be aware that Roku Media Player has some bugs that Roku hasn't addressed in several years.

The only reason you might need Handbrake is a rare disc that has a different video codec. There are some Blu Ray discs that use VC-1 video, and Roku devices won't play those. So you either have to convert the video (using something like Handbrake) or use a DLNA server that transcodes the video on the fly.

As I mentioned in another thread to you, Twonky is not the problem; I think the new version of your ripper could be the problem. Why not try a different one and see how things go. Many people here use the program DVD Fab. I use different ones that do the job for me.

The new version (7.3.0.3) of Leawo Blu-Ray Ripper defaulted to MPEG4 video codec. Twonkey apparently cannot read those MP4 files. I have changed the default video codec to H.264 in v7.3.0.3 Blu-Ray Ripper and I am in the process of ripping a DVD now. I will post the result.

What Leawo did was to allow the user to select the video codec. I never did select. But in the older version it apparently defaulted to H.264 and in the newer version it had defaulted to MPEG4. Leawo has a program that allows one to examine a video file and determine its parameters. When I used that program I determined that all the DVDs I had ripped before July 1st (when I upgraded to new version) had used the H.264 codec. All the MP4 files I had made after the 1st had used the MPEG4 codec.

The -ss parameters is start time, -to is the duration (not the end time in the original file, despite its name). By specifying the audio and video codecs to copy it will just extract that part of the movie - no transcoding.

Use handbrake, its free and open source.

Is it time consuming? oh yes, but also depends on the power of your machine.

I suggest MKV container with either h265 or VP9 codec for better quality and lower file size.

The other consideration is support for the codecs. H.264 has WAY better overall support, especially on older and lower end devices, and many more devices have hardware decoders for it. VP9/H.265 are better, but are a worse experience if the device does not have hardware decoding or a powerful enough CPU to do the decode.

WinX DVD Ripper Platinum can easily convert DVDs, DVD ISO, DVD folder into a format supported by Windows Media Player. It supports DVDs protected by region codes, RCE, CSS, UOPs, Sony ARccOS, Disney DRMs, etc. Rip a DVD for Windows in 5 minutes with GPU hardware acceleration. Play DVDs on Windows 11/10 without using extra DVD codecs.

For Windows media player users, you need to know that not all the editions of Windows get full-featured DVD playback capacity in Windows Media Player. If, unfortunately, the Windows Media Player on your Windows lackS some key codecs for DVD playback, you can download one of the below DVD decoder plug-ins and add-ons for your Windows Media Player.

If DVD disc won't play on Windows 10 PC due to the absence of necessary codecs in your media player (e.g., VLC), don't despair. Just download the DVD codec for Windows 10/11 online. There are some free DVD codec packs:


Downloading and installing third-party DVD codecs on Windows 10 is complicated and can sometimes bring virus, malware to your computer. What if the Windows 10 player can't recognize the DVD codec? There is an easier way to play DVDs on Windows 10 - download another player built with all DVD codecs like 5KPlayer. New as it is, is quickly rated one of the best media players, standing shoulder to shoulder with VLC, KMPlayer and other popular players. People have good reasons to love it: 589ccfa754

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