Hi, I'm using Debian, but never played on video encoding... There's
lots of tools in Debian to convert videos. But the question is... what
is the best solution for our 770 tablets? I mean the simplest and
lightest (I don't mind about video quality, but disk space...) So...
what kind of format should I choose as the final form for my DVD to be
seen on my 770?
<br><br>Salut,<br>Sebas.<br><br><br><div><span class="gmail_quote">2007/12/9, Paul Dundas <<a href="mailto:pdundas@btinternet.com">pdundas@btinternet.com</a>>:</span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
DrFredC.com wrote:<br>> For Windows users interested in taking their DVDs with them on their<br>> tablets via a single pass encoding... (Note : other options may be<br>> available for other OSs).<br>><br>> * Get and install Handbrake & DVD43 (Free downloads -- search google for
<br>> links)<br>...<br>><br>> Note -- Handbrake (v 0.9.1) doesn't appear to properly handle encoding<br>> DVD TV episodes. It only encodes the first show on the DVD. A work<br>> around may be to queing individual files in the video_ts folder with
<br>> Handbrake.<br>><br><br>Handbrake works well for me (not tried DVD43 - I used dvd decryptor).<br><br>Manually selecting the correct title and chapters should allow you<br>to get at other episodes on a DVD which has more than one.
<br>And for foreign language stuff, Handbrake lets you "bake in" the<br>appropriate subtitles.<br><br>Very handy for watching my DVDs while away from home.<br><br>--<br> Paul</blockquote></div><br>