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Time for encoding and Decrypting
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blakeas
Junior Member
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19. January 2005 @ 09:33 |
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It takes me when i use DVD shrink about 40 to 50 minutes for it to encode and be ready for burning. Is there anyway to reduce the time? Is decrypter fast enough so i can use DVD shrink after i use Decrypter? It seems like the same amount of time for me - I have made sure I am running DMA - Is there anything else i can do to improve the time except for buying more RAM?
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Senior Member
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19. January 2005 @ 10:11 |
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Hi there,
You should provide what kind of PCU and memory you have.
I have an AMD 1Ghz with 256Mb of ram.
I use "Deep Analysis".
It use to take me over 3 hours or more to get it analysed and shrinked sometimes, so I always ran that over night.
I now have a P4 - 3.2 Ghz with 512 Mb (@533Mhz) and holly smoke, I can Deep Analyse and Shrink an average DVD in about that, 40-45 minutes.
So I would say you are in the average, if you use Deep Analysis.
And ya, what a difference :)
VSO Software Golden Membership Proud Owner / VSO Software Beta Tester

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Synth05
Suspended due to non-functional email address
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19. January 2005 @ 10:18 |
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Yeah thats what mine usually runs at blakeas.
I have a p4 2.8 ghz Dvd-rom 8x16x8, Dl Dvd Burner. 40-50 mins for dvd shrink no deep analysis for encoding and burning.
My Dma is on, system defragmented, Cpu running great, and only reaching 6,000 kb/s at max on shrink which i think is slow. I used Dvd decrypter and been reaching 13,000 kb/s while ripping the dvd to hd (iso). Maybe theres a difference. I recently unistalled my IDE's than let win xp reinstall them after the next reboot which greatly helped. Hope this helps which it doesn't probably ;p
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 19. January 2005 @ 10:20
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squizzle
AfterDawn Addict
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20. January 2005 @ 03:06 |
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I use a crappy Dell Inspiron 600m laptop with an external Pioneer burner. I use DVD Shrink without deep analysis but with that better quality error compensation set to Sharp. It takes me about 4-5 hours to rip a movie if the compression goes between 50 and 60%. I get the entire disc though, not just the movie. Comes out beautiful. I usually start it before I go to bed or before I go to work.
Convert PAL to NTSC or NTSC to PAL------>http://forums.afterdawn.com/thread_view.cfm/167922
ScubaPete's guides------>http://www.dvdplusvideo.com/tutorial007.html
Bbmayo's guides------>http://home.comcast.net/~bbmayo/index.html
My ever-growing movie collection------>http://www.intervocative.com/dvdcollection.aspx/squizzle
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RobertSB
Junior Member
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22. January 2005 @ 19:11 |
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Been using 1 Click DVD Copy v4.1 with great success. Average times for encoding 12- 20 minutes. Didn't believe the reviews I read until I tried it. Perfect backups every time. Used Shrink/Decrypter cause they were free, but this significant time saver was well worth the price!!!
Shuttle SB75G2, P4 3.0(OC'd to 3.5Ghz) 1 Gig 3200DDR, 80G Samsung, 250G Hitachi SATA Drive, 250G Hitachi IDE, Pioneer A08XL
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Moderator
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22. January 2005 @ 22:18 |
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*moved from dvd-r for advanced users*
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brobear
Suspended permanently
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22. January 2005 @ 23:15 |
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About par for Shrink. Deep analysis and the quality settings don't need to be used until compression is around 80 to 85%. Those settings are meant to help at higher compression levels where the older Shrink used to break down.
If you want a high quality and fast program, check out DVDCopy3 at http://www.intervideo.com . A free full trial, so no reason not to give it a road test.
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Synth05
Suspended due to non-functional email address
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23. January 2005 @ 04:52 |
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Looks like ill give that a try brobear
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squizzle
AfterDawn Addict
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23. January 2005 @ 06:44 |
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Yeah, thanks brobear, I'm gonna try that on the Forgotten, which is being a real pain in the ass. I'll let you know how it turns out.
Convert PAL to NTSC or NTSC to PAL------>http://forums.afterdawn.com/thread_view.cfm/167922
ScubaPete's guides------>http://www.dvdplusvideo.com/tutorial007.html
Bbmayo's guides------>http://home.comcast.net/~bbmayo/index.html
My ever-growing movie collection------>http://www.intervocative.com/dvdcollection.aspx/squizzle
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squizzle
AfterDawn Addict
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23. January 2005 @ 06:57 |
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Nope. I ripped it as an ISO image, and DVDCopy3 can't open an ISO or MDS file (unless I missed something).
Convert PAL to NTSC or NTSC to PAL------>http://forums.afterdawn.com/thread_view.cfm/167922
ScubaPete's guides------>http://www.dvdplusvideo.com/tutorial007.html
Bbmayo's guides------>http://home.comcast.net/~bbmayo/index.html
My ever-growing movie collection------>http://www.intervocative.com/dvdcollection.aspx/squizzle
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brobear
Suspended permanently
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23. January 2005 @ 10:03 |
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Squizzle
You'll need to rip the DVD in "File" mode. DVDCopy3, like many other apps, will encode from the DVD using AnyDVD as a background ripper or from hard drive files ripped in File mode using DVD Decrypter. I use AnyDVD and rip the files to HD and load them into DVDCopy3. Using HD files ripped the way I mentioned works well with most encoding apps. In fact, I can't think of one it won't. (XCopy doesn't count, their browse function didn't work.)
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