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01-18-2005, 08:00 AM
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Developer & Designer, News Editor Emeritus
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 12,959
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Anthony Gives DVD to Pocket PC 2 a Test Run
"If you want to wow a prospective PDA user, one of the best things you can do is show off its multimedia capability. DVD to Pocket PC (DVD2PPC) takes the complex, multi-step process of DVD ripping and encoding and makes it into a simple two step process."
Anthony Caruana, otherwise known as The PDA Guy, has spent some time looking at DVD to Pocket PC 2. So for those of you deciding which of the many DVD/Pocket PC products to purchase, this quick review may help you along the way.
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01-18-2005, 09:37 AM
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Pupil
Join Date: Jun 2003
Posts: 14
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By the looks of this review - I still prefer PocketDivX Encoder - free, fast, batch conversion friendly and good quality vids that play via BetaPlayer.
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01-18-2005, 10:50 AM
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Intellectual
Join Date: Jul 2002
Posts: 146
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One omission in this review is that version 2 includes support for 640 x 480 displays! ie hx 4700.
I have to say I find DVD2PPC so fast and easy to use...its a joy!
David
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01-18-2005, 11:54 AM
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Ponderer
Join Date: Aug 2002
Posts: 82
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Been doing this with media encoder for a long time myself. Its no hastle as I have each setup saved.
It is good to see a quick and easy program to do it for those who dont like to mess about, but its too expensive to replace what I have already.
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01-18-2005, 12:15 PM
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Theorist
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 258
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Nothing beats XMpeg for direct DVD to DivX encoding. And there is the support app of VirtuaDub too.
Anyway prefer to use Windows Media Encoder as a standalone program if I want to go WMV. More control. Not sure why people are paying for something that can be done for free.
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01-18-2005, 01:14 PM
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Thoughts Media Review Team
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 599
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jonathanchoo
Not sure why people are paying for something that can be done for free.
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Because not everyone can either perform the individual steps themselves or are patient enough to take the process through each step in turn.
A tool like this just requires you to point it at the appropriate file on the DVD and then n hours later, you've got a file ready for your Pocket PC without any fuss or messing about.
This is also, incidentally, why tools like this tend to create Windows Media files, since the player is included in the device. Any other file format would require further work on the part of the user, i.e. installation of software on the Pocket PC.
Personally, I think I probably would go for a tool like this if it gave good results and if I didn't end up watching DVDs on my laptop as much as I did.
--Philip
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01-18-2005, 01:44 PM
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Sage
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 797
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Well, I sprung for it for exactly the reasons mentioned above.
1. It's easy.
2. It works.
3. I don't have to sit in front of the computer while it goes.
Anything else is gravy, but those three reasons alone made it worth it for me.
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01-18-2005, 02:15 PM
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Mystic
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 1,520
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[quote="Philip Colmer"]
Quote:
Originally Posted by jonathanchoo
Because not everyone can either perform the individual steps themselves or are patient enough to take the process through each step in turn.
{snip}
--Philip
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Unfortunately I may fall in the ability part of your statement. ![Embarrassment](images/smilies/redface.gif) ops:
I spent hours last night trying to get XMPEG to work and can't get anything bigger than a 7mb avi which causes my windows explorer to crash if I try to look at the properties.
Which of course caused me to reconsider one of the laymen's (sp?) tools. ![Embarrassment](images/smilies/redface.gif) ops:
I haven't given up but the outlook seems bleak.
__________________
Phone: Nexus one Backup Phone: AT&T Samsung Jack; Future Phone: I'm Watching WP7; Media Player: Platinum Zune HD 32GB; Home Server: HP MediaSmart Server LX195 Console: XBox 360, PS3, Wii
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01-18-2005, 02:48 PM
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Pupil
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 10
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You guys seen FairUse Wizards, absolutley spiffing for dvd -> xvid conversion... and a useful batch mode ![Smile](images/smilies/smile.gif)
http://www.fairusewizard.com/
Take a peek (its free for files created under 700mb!)
Tig.
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01-18-2005, 09:44 PM
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Theorist
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 258
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Philip Colmer
A tool like this just requires you to point it at the appropriate file on the DVD and then n hours later, you've got a file ready for your Pocket PC without any fuss or messing about
--Philip
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Actually tools like XMPeg allows batch conversion. Just queue them up. Same goes with VirtuaDub. i much prefer to use these applications because I have more control on the quality and file size.
The problem with all of these commericial products that I have tried is almost everytime my output files would have aspect ratio problems.
Speaking of Windows Media, if you are planning to encode videos at high bitrate videos then you might as well forget it.
On my Jam, WMP10 has serious problem playing videos encoded at higher than 700kbps (peak: 1300kbps), it just keeps stuttering, where as BetaPlayer has no problem with 2000kbps DivX files.
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