Let's see, you can spend a week trying to get DVD::rip
working and the associated stuff like transcode
that it needs, and dvdcss and all the codecs...

Or for $100 you can simply download dvdXcopy and get
it running on your windows box in under five minutes.

wah, wah, wah. cry all you want about windows vs linux.
DVD::rip didn't copy entire DVDs with all features the
last time I checked (only the main title) and you'll be
whining to somebody who's pretty much pissed because
I've spent four *days* trying to get SMTP-AUTH working
with pam and sendmail. Something that should darn well
be the default. Time *IS* money and nobody is going
to reimburse you just because you worshiped linux. DVD
access/reading/playing/usage is definitely an area
where linux loses.

Sorry, most of the is frustrated rant but the truth about
DVDs none the less.

On Mon, 2003-07-21 at 11:06, Nicos Gollan wrote:
> On Monday 21 July 2003 19:31, Antonio Rodr0X wrote:
> > \begin{fiction}
> > Suppose you have a DVD movie that you want to copy.
> > What would be the best way to do it?
> > \end{fiction}
> 
> Search google for "dvd::rip". That should do it for transferring movies to 
> ((S)V)CD, DVD+-R(W) or harddisk.
> 
> -- 
> Got Backup?
> 


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