![]() ![]() I'm not an Apple guy so I want to stay away from those formats. But you're saying having FLAC in a video file is not possible and I have to have mp3/aac/etc.? Or are you just saying the video itself cannot be lossless? All I'm looking for is the "best" (in quotes because everyone has a different definition of best) format to rip these to for quality/compatibility purposes. When I did that, I bought DVD audio extractor and was able to rip to FLAC. I'm new to the DVD ripping game other than I have ripped my DVDs for audio. Neglecting to include these during a rip will exclude the contents within the mux.Ĭlick to expand.Thanks for the comments. There are subtitles that are usually included, as well. Mind there is more than just video and audio. So the question which needs to be asked, is what do you really want as an output of the processing? Single file movies are good for moving to a tablet and watching on a plane, and an ISO includes gives you access to the disc menu system and additional content on the submenus. These are much like a FLAC files, only more suited to videos The video and audio files have to be ripped then put into a container like an MKV or MP4 file. If you wanted a single file for a movie with all the stuff, this will require processing or muxing as it's known. Of coarse, today there are many programs that read ISO files as if they were physical discs. This is just creating a master for burning purposes. This is because you would be ripping an ISO file. ![]() This aside, if you don't want to lose any data off the physical disc, you and use almost any thing. And Blu-Ray fixes the issue with lossy audio. This actually is why DVD-A was created for audio. It's too much data to fit the audio on a single layer layer disc along with video. Well, there is not such thing as lossess DVD. ![]()
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