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MediaPortal 1
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Moving Pictures
BD-rip, ISO = No subtitles?
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<blockquote data-quote="ixian" data-source="post: 515665" data-attributes="member: 54932"><p>I know, but sometimes you have to do a little legwork to get things exactly the way you want them.</p><p></p><p>Here's a list:</p><p></p><p></p><p><a href="http://www.bunkus.org/videotools/mkvtoolnix/" target="_blank">mkvtoolnix -- Matroska tools for Linux/Unix and Windows</a></p><p>MKVtoolnix</p><p></p><p><a href="http://haali.cs.msu.ru/mkv/" target="_blank">Haali Media Splitter</a></p><p>Haali media splitter</p><p></p><p><a href="http://madshi.net/eac3to.zip" target="_blank">http://madshi.net/eac3to.zip</a></p><p>eac3to</p><p></p><p><a href="http://madshi.net/madFlac.rar" target="_blank">http://madshi.net/madFlac.rar</a></p><p>Madflac decoder</p><p></p><p><a href="http://www.videohelp.com/tools/BDSup2Sub" target="_blank">BDSup2Sub - Video software and downloads - VideoHelp.com</a></p><p>BDSup2Sub</p><p></p><p>Download the programs above - what I do is extract eac3to to it's own folder, install MKVTookNix and AnotherEAC via their installers, install MadFlac, then unzip BDSub2Sub in to the eac3to folder. You only have to do this once.</p><p></p><p>Now run AnotherEACtoGUI (as you may gather, it's just a GUI front end for eac3to) and set the program paths above to where it asks.</p><p></p><p>That's it. When you insert a disk make sure AnyDVD HD is running and that it is the latest version - the above tools can't work if the disk isn't decrypted. Wait for AnyDVD HD to say it's done scanning. Now analyze the disk with AnotherEAC - I've yet to find one that doesn't work with it but it's a work in progress so there may be a bug here and there.</p><p></p><p>Once the disk is analyzed you can either click "batch" - which will do all the work for you - or, if you want more control over the process (say you want to specifiy other subtitles, etc) click "Command Line" . That will pop up a list of the video, audio, subtitles, and chapters on the disk. First, change the name of the final file to whatever you want (the name of the movie, in other words) and choose the destination. Then click Command Line and check the ones you want then click process. It'll take a while (about 20 minutes for an average BD on a reasonable fast PC) then you will have all the separate files in the directory you specified.</p><p></p><p>From there, assuming you went the "manual" route with command (if you do batch the below is done for you, but you have less control over what is selected) you have two steps:</p><p></p><p>Run BDSup2Sub - just double click it (requires Java runtime). Load the extracted subtitles from the step above, it'll show you a preview of them, browse through and make sure everything looks correct, then go to file-export. This will export the subs to a standard sub/idx format, which most players (like Mediaportal) can process.</p><p></p><p>Now run MKVMerge. Select all the files you want to put in the mkv, go to global, select the chapter.txt file that was extracted, then choose the final destination/output directory, and Merge away. </p><p></p><p>I know what you are thinking - seems complicated. But really, after the first time you do it, it's not. I usually would rip a few disks each evening while I was reading email, etc. After the first one it's pretty simple and in the end you get a *perfect* mkv file you can play in Mediaportal or other players with subs, alternate audio tracks, perfect BD quality audio/video, etc.</p><p></p><p>Once you start doing it this way you'll never mess with disks or external players again, trust me.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ixian, post: 515665, member: 54932"] I know, but sometimes you have to do a little legwork to get things exactly the way you want them. Here's a list: [url=http://www.bunkus.org/videotools/mkvtoolnix/]mkvtoolnix -- Matroska tools for Linux/Unix and Windows[/url] MKVtoolnix [url=http://haali.cs.msu.ru/mkv/]Haali Media Splitter[/url] Haali media splitter [url]http://madshi.net/eac3to.zip[/url] eac3to [url]http://madshi.net/madFlac.rar[/url] Madflac decoder [url=http://www.videohelp.com/tools/BDSup2Sub]BDSup2Sub - Video software and downloads - VideoHelp.com[/url] BDSup2Sub Download the programs above - what I do is extract eac3to to it's own folder, install MKVTookNix and AnotherEAC via their installers, install MadFlac, then unzip BDSub2Sub in to the eac3to folder. You only have to do this once. Now run AnotherEACtoGUI (as you may gather, it's just a GUI front end for eac3to) and set the program paths above to where it asks. That's it. When you insert a disk make sure AnyDVD HD is running and that it is the latest version - the above tools can't work if the disk isn't decrypted. Wait for AnyDVD HD to say it's done scanning. Now analyze the disk with AnotherEAC - I've yet to find one that doesn't work with it but it's a work in progress so there may be a bug here and there. Once the disk is analyzed you can either click "batch" - which will do all the work for you - or, if you want more control over the process (say you want to specifiy other subtitles, etc) click "Command Line" . That will pop up a list of the video, audio, subtitles, and chapters on the disk. First, change the name of the final file to whatever you want (the name of the movie, in other words) and choose the destination. Then click Command Line and check the ones you want then click process. It'll take a while (about 20 minutes for an average BD on a reasonable fast PC) then you will have all the separate files in the directory you specified. From there, assuming you went the "manual" route with command (if you do batch the below is done for you, but you have less control over what is selected) you have two steps: Run BDSup2Sub - just double click it (requires Java runtime). Load the extracted subtitles from the step above, it'll show you a preview of them, browse through and make sure everything looks correct, then go to file-export. This will export the subs to a standard sub/idx format, which most players (like Mediaportal) can process. Now run MKVMerge. Select all the files you want to put in the mkv, go to global, select the chapter.txt file that was extracted, then choose the final destination/output directory, and Merge away. I know what you are thinking - seems complicated. But really, after the first time you do it, it's not. I usually would rip a few disks each evening while I was reading email, etc. After the first one it's pretty simple and in the end you get a *perfect* mkv file you can play in Mediaportal or other players with subs, alternate audio tracks, perfect BD quality audio/video, etc. Once you start doing it this way you'll never mess with disks or external players again, trust me. [/QUOTE]
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