This was a lot more work than I expected. Then again, I am a newb. And lazy.
Continue reading “Finally got this DVD ripped and copied to my iPhone”
Ripping a DVD to iPhone or iPod-compatible m4v for free?
I was stuck somewhere the other day wishing I had the full movie “Cars” on my iPhone. Surprisingly, this is not something you can presently do through iTunes. After some searching I figured out an easy way to do it for free. The two programs you’ll need are good old DVD Decrypter and WinFF. Put DVD Decryptor in IFO mode and set it not to split the .vob files by size (so it rips them to one huge 6+ GB .vob file). Then drag the .vob file onto WinFF (making sure to use the proper preset for iPhone/iPod) and click “Convert.” It’ll take a while but it works. With my first attempt there seem to be some audio/video sync issues but I’ll play around with it.
Also, see this previous post for more info about WinFF and iPhone-compatible video.
One-click converting .avi to .mp4 for iPod or iPhone
After a lot of searching for an easy way to do this, I stumbled onto WinFF, which is a gui wrapper around ffmpeg, a GPL’d MPEG encoder. It worked pretty well out of the box, but for all of the AVIs I’d recorded with my old camera (Canon Powershot A540) it would fail immediately with this error:
Audio resampler only works with 16 bits per sample. patch welcome.
After some searching it seems this is related to a known bug which was apparently fixed in February 2009. I set out to find a newer ffmpeg.exe (which is what WinFF calls to do the actual conversion). I found some Win32 builds of ffmpeg here but found that they all claimed to not know the “libfaac” codec. After some more digging I learned that libfaac (the audio codec for MP4 for iPod/iPhone) is no longer considered free software and was dropped from the repository in mid-April. Fortunately there were older builds available, and I grabbed the one dated 2009-04-01, extracted the ffmpeg.exe into my WinFF directory and voila, it worked.
Old ffmpeg.exe:
C:\Documents and Settings\Evan>"C:\Program Files\WinFF\ffmpeg.exe" -version FFmpeg version SVN-r15986, Copyright (c) 2000-2008 Fabrice Bellard, et al. configuration: --extra-cflags=-fno-common --enable-memalign-hack --enable-pthr eads --enable-libmp3lame --enable-libxvid --enable-libvorbis --enable-libtheora --enable-libspeex --enable-libfaac --enable-libgsm --enable-libx264 --enable-lib schroedinger --enable-avisynth --enable-swscale --enable-gpl libavutil 49.12. 0 / 49.12. 0 libavcodec 52. 6. 0 / 52. 6. 0 libavformat 52.23. 1 / 52.23. 1 libavdevice 52. 1. 0 / 52. 1. 0 libswscale 0. 6. 1 / 0. 6. 1 built on Dec 3 2008 01:59:37, gcc: 4.2.4 FFmpeg SVN-r15986 libavutil 49.12. 0 / 49.12. 0 libavcodec 52. 6. 0 / 52. 6. 0 libavformat 52.23. 1 / 52.23. 1 libavdevice 52. 1. 0 / 52. 1. 0 libswscale 0. 6. 1 / 0. 6. 1
New ffmpeg.exe:
C:\Documents and Settings\Evan>"C:\Program Files\WinFF\ffmpeg.exe" -version FFmpeg version SVN-r18306, Copyright (c) 2000-2009 Fabrice Bellard, et al. configuration: --enable-memalign-hack --prefix=/mingw --cross-prefix=i686-ming w32- --cc=ccache-i686-mingw32-gcc --target-os=mingw32 --arch=i686 --cpu=i686 --e xtra-cflags=-fno-common --enable-avisynth --enable-gpl --enable-zlib --enable-bz lib --enable-libgsm --enable-libfaac --enable-pthreads --enable-libvorbis --enab le-libmp3lame --enable-libopenjpeg --enable-libtheora --enable-libspeex --enable -libxvid --enable-libfaad --enable-libschroedinger --enable-libx264 libavutil 50. 2. 0 / 50. 2. 0 libavcodec 52.22. 3 / 52.22. 3 libavformat 52.32. 0 / 52.32. 0 libavdevice 52. 1. 0 / 52. 1. 0 libswscale 0. 7. 1 / 0. 7. 1 built on Apr 2 2009 03:25:40, gcc: 4.2.4 FFmpeg SVN-r18306 libavutil 50. 2. 0 / 50. 2. 0 libavcodec 52.22. 3 / 52.22. 3 libavformat 52.32. 0 / 52.32. 0 libavdevice 52. 1. 0 / 52. 1. 0 libswscale 0. 7. 1 / 0. 7. 1
This also works great for encoding videos to XviD, which shrinks them to about 10-20% of their original size, making it much faster (in some cases, possible) to upload them to sharing sites.