Taddeusz wrote:The point of this program is to rip the movie into MKV without any loss in quality. By converting from one lossy format to another you are thereby reducing the quality. There are other programs you can find to convert the audio if you so wish. eac3to can do this for you with minimal hassle.
Thanks for your input, but let me tell you I think you're not getting it quite right, if all I want is a lossless data compression file, I can simply copy the movie's m2ts file, to a hard drive (external or internal) and watch it. Popcorn hour is perfclty alright with that format and so is any computer (meanwhile I bouhgt the PopcornHour a-110).
Anyway, my question is: what do people want DTS MKV losseless files for?
You guys are planning watching them where? - in your computer??! or you have a HDMI out to plug the computer to the LCD *and* to a DTS home theatre system so that you can full benefit DTS sound quality?
Well I tryied that for a while with my Vaio laptop but I give it up, it's too much hassle, too much cables and no real "I'm watching a movie" feeling.
If you want all that then stick to "the real McCoy": Blu-Ray player and blu-ray discs.
Besides that, I wonder of all the people out there, with multimedia players who can't handle DTS, I'm thinking for instance in WD HD TV and others...
Also, I dare you to notice the diffence between a good rip made with HDconvertToX and a looseless m2ts file. If there is a difference, it's minimum, even connected to a full HD LCD.
All said and done, MakeMKV it's a good program, but still lacks many feautures to be worth while using it:
- subtitles doesn't work.
- changing chapters always give us that pixelazation effects for a couple of seconds.
- no DTS to AC3 conversion
Notice that I din't mention the lack of custom bit rate encode option, because that would takes us to a different level of application.
triptop