Suggestion: On-The-Fly Audio & Video Conversion
Posted: Thu Oct 04, 2018 7:29 pm
MakeMKV is a great tool, especially for ripping Blu-Rays. But I think it would be even better if it could convert the audio and video tracks after removing the DRM. I noticed that MakeMKV at one point was able to convert the audio via FFMPEG. I’d like to be able to have MakeMKV use FFMPEG for converting the video and audio tracks, while keeping the subtitles (i.e. ffmpeg -i input.mkv -c:v copy -c:a flac -c:s copy output.mkv). For Blu-Rays from 2011 and earlier, it would be also be great to have interlacing detection and deinterlacing as part of the conversion process, or at least optional de-interlacing (enabled in Preferences), perhaps with FFMPEG’s Bob Weaver Deinterlacing filter.
This feature could be an optional feature, since not everyone wants it, though I think most folks would want it. With this feature, there could be a tab in Preferences called “Conversion”, where you could have an enable/disable checkbox, and audio and video codec prefences for DVDs, Blu-Rays, and 4K Blu-Rays (since 4K Blu-Rays are already in H.265). The “Conversion” tab could have sections for codec conversion settings for different types of media (DVD, Blu-Ray, UHD Blu-Ray), which mainly only matters because 4K Blu-Rays are already in H265 and I don’t want to waste CPU cycles converting H.264 (AKA MPEG-4) content to H.265.
I and many others would appreciate this feature because it would make it possible to A) Make ripping and converting Blu-Rays more convenient by merging the two steps from the user’s perspective, and B) Allow the user to leave the computer for longer than 40 minutes, especially in the case of Blu-Rays from 2011 which require de-interlacing – a time-intensive process, especially on a dual-core CPU (as opposed to say, a six-core CPU).
If this conversion feature was added, I would be more than willing to spend the $50 on the paid version. I’m currently using the free version, but the conversion feature would be worth the $50 because it would simplify the ripping process substantially and it would be a more efficient use of time, especially if coupled with a disc queue.
This feature could be an optional feature, since not everyone wants it, though I think most folks would want it. With this feature, there could be a tab in Preferences called “Conversion”, where you could have an enable/disable checkbox, and audio and video codec prefences for DVDs, Blu-Rays, and 4K Blu-Rays (since 4K Blu-Rays are already in H.265). The “Conversion” tab could have sections for codec conversion settings for different types of media (DVD, Blu-Ray, UHD Blu-Ray), which mainly only matters because 4K Blu-Rays are already in H265 and I don’t want to waste CPU cycles converting H.264 (AKA MPEG-4) content to H.265.
I and many others would appreciate this feature because it would make it possible to A) Make ripping and converting Blu-Rays more convenient by merging the two steps from the user’s perspective, and B) Allow the user to leave the computer for longer than 40 minutes, especially in the case of Blu-Rays from 2011 which require de-interlacing – a time-intensive process, especially on a dual-core CPU (as opposed to say, a six-core CPU).
If this conversion feature was added, I would be more than willing to spend the $50 on the paid version. I’m currently using the free version, but the conversion feature would be worth the $50 because it would simplify the ripping process substantially and it would be a more efficient use of time, especially if coupled with a disc queue.