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Aiseesoft BD to MKV Copy Giveaway
$39.00
ABGELAUFEN

Giveaway of the day — Aiseesoft BD to MKV Copy

Aiseesoft BD to MKV Copy ist ideal, um 2D oder 3D Blu-ray Filme in MKV Containerformat ohne Transkodierung verlustfrei zu kopieren und sichern.
$39.00 ABGELAUFEN
Benutzer Rating: 973 7 Kommentare

Aiseesoft BD to MKV Copy war am 26. Januar 2013! als Giveaway verfügbar!

Giveaway of the Day heute
$19.99
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Ladet Tidal-Musik stapelweise herunter und konvertiert sie für den Offline-Gebrauch.

Aiseesoft BD to MKV Copy wird speziell für Windows-Nutzer entworfen, um 2D oder 3D Blu-ray Filme in MKV Containerformat ohne Transkodierung verlustfrei zu kopieren und sichern. Der Blu-ray to MKV Copy kann alle Audiospuren, beispielsweise HD Audio- Dolby TrueHD 7.1/5.1, DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1/5.1, Dolby Digital 5.1 und Untertitel der Blu-ray Filme behalten. Damit man gewüschte Bl-ray Filme mit Lieblingsaudio sowie Untertitel auf PC nach Wunsch sehen kann. Der BD to MKV Copy ermöglicht es euch auch, unerwünschte Kapitel, Audiospur oder Untertitel zu entfernen und nur Lieblingsfilme verlustfrei zu sichern.

Features:

  • 2D/3D Blu-ray zu MKV kopieren/sichern
  • Blu-ray Filme in MKV kopieren
  • Die neuesten Blu-ray Filme kopieren
  • Alle Audiospuren und Untertitel werden behalten
  • Verlustfreie Ausgabe
  • Windows 8 Support
  • HD Audio-Support: Dolby TrueHD 7.1/5.1, DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1/5.1 und Dolby Digital 5.1.

Sonderangebot:
Aiseesoft bietet euch 50% Rabatt mit dem Code AISEJTY - gültig für alle Aiseesoft Produkte.

System-anforderungen:

Windows XP (SP2 or later), Vista, 7, 8 (x32/x64); 1.2GHz Intel/AMD CPU or above; 1G RAM or more

Herausgeber:

Aiseesoft Studio

Homepage:

http://www.aiseesoft.com/bd-to-mkv-copy/

Dateigröße:

32.5 MB

Preis:

$39.00

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Developed by MPCSTAR
Transform media files for playback on various devices.
Developed by VSO Software
View the feedback from multiple IP cameras.

Kommentare zum Aiseesoft BD to MKV Copy

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#7

Hab gestern mal Avatar 2D gerippt...brauchte ca 2-3 std weiss grad nich genau. mkv war dann ca 30GB groß :) hat aber alles supi funktioniert

Antworten   |   Joe  –  11 years ago  –  War dieser Kommentar hilfreich? Ja | Nein (0)
#6

Herzlichen Dank an alle Hersteller und an das GAOTD -TEAM . Aufgrund der mehrere TB starken Harddisc etc. lade ich solche Software natürlich gerne herunter und installiere diese . Wer dies nicht möchte wird vieleicht bei anderen Angeboten fündig. Aber es lohnt sich immer diese Angebote im Blickfeld zu behalten. Die ständigen Meckerer scheinen jedoch nicht zu begreifen das niemand gezwungen wird eine Software als Geschenk zu betrachten und davon zu profitieren. Für kreative Leute sind diese Angebote jedoch ein willkommenes Geschenk .

Antworten   |   Danke !!!  –  11 years ago  –  War dieser Kommentar hilfreich? Ja | Nein (0)
#5

Ich frage mich immer, ob die „nein danke“-Schreiber die Software tatsaechlich getestet haben. Vermutlich kommt auf 10 „Bewehrter“ ein Einziger, der tatsaechlich die SW installiert, getestet und dann kommentiert hat.

Ich habe die SW noch nicht installiert, ergo noch nicht getestet.

Zudem liegt mir (noch) kein adaequates 3D Blu-ray Material vor.

So, das ist die Meinung eines normalen – also keines bezahlten Schoenschreiber.

Mit freundlichen Gruessen
Atom Andi

Fuer einen (nicht anonymen, sachlichen Disput) stehe ich jederzeit im http://www.pcwelt.de/forum/ zu Verfuegung. Salve!

Antworten   |   Atom Andi  –  11 years ago  –  War dieser Kommentar hilfreich? Ja | Nein (0)
#4

@hirni
Geschenkt würden wir dich auch nicht nehmen,
aber dieses Spezial-Tool schon, denn das alles kann nicht jede Videosoftware und Freeware schon gar nicht! Deshalb danke GAOTD!

Antworten   |   antrotteltroll  –  11 years ago  –  War dieser Kommentar hilfreich? Ja | Nein (0)
#3

Die Dinger von AISEESOFT sind eigentlich immer ganz gut. Warum nicht?

Antworten   |   cybertom  –  11 years ago  –  War dieser Kommentar hilfreich? Ja | Nein (0)
#2

Ja Danke,- und her damit!

Antworten   |   klärer  –  11 years ago  –  War dieser Kommentar hilfreich? Ja | Nein (0)
#1

Danke nein, auch nicht geschenkt. Schönes Wochenende!

Antworten   |   hiernie  –  11 years ago  –  War dieser Kommentar hilfreich? Ja | Nein (0)
Kommentar hinzufügen
Top-Kommentare auf Englisch
#5

Well..have you ever noticed that whenever an AISEESOFT product is released here it scores a very high GAOTD user rating in a blink of an eye? This sounds very suspicious to me....

For instance, this GAOTD is no bad but it definitely doesn't deserve 71% THUMBS UP since it doesn't bypass any DRM protection out there and above all it doesn't support NVIDIA and AMD GPU acceleration, which is a BIG CONS for me. Besides that, as rightly noticed by Ashraf, with this tool you are not allowed to reburn any ripped Blu-rays movie into a new DVD and this is another BIG CONS for me because I don't like the idea of being forced to fill up the HD of my PC of huge movie and video files.

For all of these reasons I don't give it a THUMBS UP!


BEST FREE ALTERNATIVES

* DVDFab HD Decrypter
Can remove almost any kind of DVD protections of a whatsoever DVD and then copy your DVD/Blu-ray to your HD at higher speed when compared to this GAOTD

http://www.dvdfab.com/hd-decrypter.htm

* (Portable) Bluray Decrypter 2.1.00
It removes any copy protection from Blu-rays (AACS) so that you can copy your blu-ray movies to your HD without losing quality.
Can also keep the Blu-ray folder structure, original 1080p video, original menu, as well as the original audio/subtitle tracks.

http://www.bluraytoavi.com/blu-ray-decrypter.html
http://www.softpedia.com/get/PORTABLE-SOFTWARE/Multimedia/Video/Portable-Bluray-Decrypter.shtml

* DAPlayer
Breakthrough Blu-ray DVD HD videos playback for playing high-definition videos, like Bluray, AVCHD, TS, MKV, MPEG4, H264 video formats. Supports any commercial and homemade Bluray multi-track video/audio and subtitles, and can also be used to decrypt and backup blu-ray movies (compatible with BD+ and AACS protected Bluray) so as to play them from your hard disk and even from your virtual driver.

http://www.digiarty.com/

If you are not 100% sure whether or not your system is really capable of playing high-definition movies (Blu-ray Disc and Blu-ray 3D content), give this great free utility a whirl:

http://www.cyberlink.com/stat/bd-support/enu/index.jsp

Of course this GAOTD is not able to convert video formats other than MKV, but I don’t see this as a con because MKV format has many advantages compared to other formats (to AVI or MPEG for instance), such as the fact that it’s OPEN SOURCE and supports menus and subtitles tracks, not to mention that it also supports virtually any video &audio format out there and can be played by almost any kind of video player nowadays (PotPlayer, VLC etc…).

But if you are looking for a magic FREE & PORTABLE tool designed to convert your ripped DVD/Blu-ray file to any other video/audio formats, just use this superb software kissing your wallet goodbye for good:

http://www.softpedia.com/get/PORTABLE-SOFTWARE/Multimedia/Video/Portable-XMedia-Recode.shtml

Enjoy!!

Giovanni  –  11 years ago  –  War dieser Kommentar hilfreich? Ja | Nein (+97)
#4

Pros
*Backup/rip your Blu-ray movies to MKV
*Supports ripping of Blu-ray discs and Blu-ray folders
*Output quality is 1:1 with little to no loss on quality; keeps 1080HD video stream and audio/subtitle tracks (like Dobly TrueHD, etc.)
*Allows you to remove unwanted audio tracks if you wish
*Supports both 2D and 3D movies

Cons
*Does not provide any information on if it will bypass DRM protection or not. It may or may not bypass DRM protection.
*Only rips Blu-ray to MKV format; doesn’t support any other format such as MP4, MPEG, AVI, etc.
*Won’t rip to ISO
*Is not for people that want to reburn ripped Blu-rays; it won’t let you to rip Blu-ray to ‘Blu-ray folder’ meaning you cannot do lossless reburning of movies to Blu-ray discs
*Ripping process was on the slow side
*Does not support NVIDIA and AMD GPU acceleration

Free Alternatives
DVDFab HD Decrypter

Final Verdict
Click here for final verdict and full review

Ashraf from dotTech  –  11 years ago  –  War dieser Kommentar hilfreich? Ja | Nein (+71)
#3

Why bother with Blu-Ray?...
There are all sorts of reasons to dislike Blu-Ray, but for many [most?] people it remains the only way to watch a movie in really nice quality HD -- that said, in our experience most movies on Blu-Ray aren't any better than an up-sampled DVD. There are also lots of reasons to make a copy of any Blu-Ray discs you buy -- providing it's legal where you live -- including protecting your investment as Blu-Ray discs seem more easily damaged than DVDs or CDs.

Now there are 2 hurtles to making a copy of your Blu-Ray discs -- the major hurtle of course is the usually quite heavy DRM, but very often you must also re-encode the movie so it will fit on a 25 GB BD disc or a DVD... you can buy 50 GB blank discs, but they're still more expensive [$4 - $15 each at Newegg this morning]. And yes, while your mileage will vary, Google & you'll find plenty of people who feel they can maintain the original quality [or come Very close to it] putting Blu-Ray format video on a [often dual layer] DVD.

Why MKV?...
On a Blu-Ray disc the [usually AVC/H.264] video's in one or more .m2ts container files, which can be a hassle to work with -- lots of software won't handle .m2ts, at least without errors like dropped frames &/or audio sync problems. The MKV format is superior as an alternative -- AVI is iffy, MOV most often won't work, & less software handles .264 than .m2ts. MultiAVCHD is the leading free app to put your video into the Blu-Ray format so you can burn it [it's also more popular than a Lot of payware alternatives], and it likes importing MKV. [Once you convert (re-encode) the video .avi, .mov, mp4 etc. may be fine.]

Aiseesoft BD to MKV Copy does just that, copies the video to your hard drive. You can use the MKV as-is, since there are several nice players that'll handle it very well, or you can use that as the starting point to a conversion. Working with video means a lot of trade-offs or compromises, with most every plus accompanied by a minus. That includes the software you use. Generally easier & faster mean lower quality results that don't always match what you really wanted. But easier & faster are easier & faster, so if that's what you prefer you might be happier with Aiseesoft's Blu-Ray Ripper Ultimate -- otherwise you can probably do better using BD to MKV Copy & trading some of your time & effort for more ideal results. [That's not BTW saying anything bad about Aiseesoft's ripper, but just rippers & converters in general.]

[Re]encoding Blu-Ray video...
If you're re-encoding to a smaller frame size AVC/H.264 to stick on a cell phone many of the ffmpeg-based converters [and rippers] out of China do a fine job quickly. For tablets I prefer Nero's Recode. If you're encoding for DVDs you want an app that will let you do variable bit rate, & in the US [or anywhere they use NTSC], ideally that app will also let you use something called pulldown, keeping the actual video at 24 fps [you'll often see 23.976, which may or may not be interchangeable depending on the app] & inserting flags to repeat frames to = 29.976 fps. [Note: Research (Google) & you'll find some people swear by constant bit rate DVD video -- they've just never used a decent variable bit rate encoder. When you've got a file size limit, it makes good, logical sense to allocate a higher bit rate (& larger amount of data) to the scenes that need it most. Likewise you'll find folks that are ignorant of or maybe scoff at pulldown -- why make the file larger by writing/storing duplicate frames when with a simple instruction (flag) included in the file, the player will simply show the same frames twice?]

Encoding video for a Blu-Ray player can be a bit of an extra hassle depending on the software you use to put your audio & video into the format you'll burn to disc. Long story short, your choice of Blu-Ray authoring app may lock you into using that app's encoder. Lots of Blu-Ray authoring software includes compliance testing, intended to make sure your video will work on most every Blu-Ray player in existence -- if you use one of those apps [rather than multiAVCHD] most often it will insist on encoding your video, even if you just got done encoding it using something else. Worse, these same authoring apps often limit you to using certain templates [profiles] for Blu-Ray that are included in the program, or else it'll again re-encode your video, & they may prevent or limit changing any Blu-Ray template settings.

If you decide to use multiAVCHD, or some other authoring app that doesn't include compliance checking, the leading free AVC/H.264 encoder is X264, which is included in ffmpeg. Encoding HD AVC video is slow no matter what soft & hardware you use, & X264 includes a setting that trades quality for speed. Software *X* may set X264 to encode at max speed, sacrificing quality, while app *Y* takes the opposite approach, favoring quality over speed. You can access the full range of speed settings if you use X264 from the command line, or if you use one of the X264 front ends [GUIs] like Avanti, but if you'd rather use a video converter app you'll have to compare them to see what works for you, what gives you the quality levels you're after at a speed you can live with.

GPU assist...
Graphics processors specialize in a different sort of calculations than CPUs, so they can be a great help crunching numbers on Wall St., cracking passwords, & sometimes processing video. When it comes to video, using a GPU is both finicky & tricky... Say you have 2 PCs, both with the same hardware, GPU assist may work on one, while it fails using the same software on the 2nd -- trying to figure out why is the subject of many, Many online discussions &/or threads. Some things are done faster by the GPU rather than the CPU, but you very often sacrifice quality -- the quality loss can be even greater if/when the software is written to use maximum speed vs. quality. And here's the tricky part -- reading, decoding the video, then splitting the processing between the CPU & GPU, then writing the results to disk creates bottlenecks, so GPU assist may take a load off the CPU, but may or may not do anything to increase the overall speed of a video conversion. Whether it's worth it or not depends on your hardware, installed software, the original or source video, & the app you're using. Bear in mind that just reading [decoding] 1080p video is no easy task, so a bit of [often DirectX] GPU assist there can be as helpful, maybe even more so, as an assist encoding that video... pay attention to overall quality & speed as you try out & compare software & settings -- GPU-Z may show an encoding app *really* using your GPU, but how long the job actually takes & its quality level is what's important.

FWIW I use an Intel-based board that includes Virtu, & as possible use ffdshow & LAVFilters for their use of Intel's OpenCL. What that means is that hopefully video software will use the graphics portion of my CPU to assist decoding/playing HD video, along with my ATI graphics card's OpenCL drivers for their assist processing & encoding that video. I don't think anything's faster than using Intel's OpenCL but capabilities are limited. When everything works together it's fast [the fastest I've seen anyway], but it's also broken several times towards the end of last year -- I'm afraid to change anything without a full backup -- & compatibility problems are expected [e.g. I have to install the LAVFilters for some jobs, then uninstall them for others]. And I've been pretty lucky -- LOTs of video folks are pulling their hair out because of GPU assist. Just a bit of a reality check to balance all the hype.

mike  –  11 years ago  –  War dieser Kommentar hilfreich? Ja | Nein (+34)
#2

I like this company and its products but I think they are trying to sell the same application with some functionalities enabled or disabled with name that is a combination of words:
total, copy, converter, ripper, video, media, platinium, ultimate
This policy drives me crazy...

errorsys  –  11 years ago  –  War dieser Kommentar hilfreich? Ja | Nein (+27)
#1

I wish people would save our time by not posting to just let us know they don't need this sort of software, and can't understand why anyone would. Do you guys go on car sites, and let everyone know that you don't see the need to drive anywhere?

Personally, I'm grateful for the freebie.

Joe The Videographer  –  11 years ago  –  War dieser Kommentar hilfreich? Ja | Nein (+19)

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