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Useful for say, embedding the forced English subtitles into Hunt For Red October, so you know what they are saying in Russian, just as was presented in the theater.Ĭhad, I tried RipBot264 before but it had problems with Avatar. Oh, and even lets you embed subtitles right into the video. I've done around 200 blu-rays with it and the speed, quality, and just total ease of use make me abuse my Amazon Prime and price tracking so much more. It does subtitles, can convert the audio or extract the Core from DTS HD or True HD audio (a feature I very much need, since my audio amplifier doesn't do higher than 5.1 audio).įor the most part it's just a well put together gui tools for a lot of the things you just mentioned. Sounds about how involved the steps I did before Ripbot264. mkv too.įar from a one-click solution, but it works for me :-) If the blu ray has subs, then I demux the relevant steam with tsMuxer and then use bdsup2sub to ocr them to a text file. Then I use mkvmerge to mux the audio steam with the video stream. Then I use eac2to to encode the audio to a 448 kbps ac3 track, and a nightly build of handbrake to encode the. m2ts file, and the audio track to dts/ac3/wav file. Then tsMuxerGUI to demux the video stream to a. Then eac3to analyse the rip to see what steams it has. I use AnyDVD to take the files from my blu-ray to my HD.
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