They're false-positives, and my source is trusted, don't worry.Ah malware builds, aight!
They're false-positives, and my source is trusted, don't worry.Ah malware builds, aight!
Oh, neat. That's good to know.A few have been mentioned that will correctly play the menus. Not sure if VLC still needs a bunch of extra rigamarole to play the menus properly, but I assume so since the latest comment stating it still works is less than a month old.
In this instance yes. But I normal do run Linux.@Ryab do you run Windows btw?
See this exact thing works for most of them. But I have 1 specific set of discs that either crashes VLC, loads to a black screen, or displays a bunch of corrupted video. I have confirmed that the tracks are very much not corrupted.This function here creates a copy of the file structure of the disc, and optionally also strips out encryption of A/V content.
I just make lossless MKVs of the video content, but this is what @linuxares would have been referring to above, since it's essentially a proper image of the disc when made this way. Then you just need to worry about how to play it/what to play it on.
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After trying several things in my test, I found that you must go to Open Disc (even though "Open Folder" is an option, it doesn't work), then select your Blu-Ray backup folder from there for VLC to work with it. Plays just like the disc if you do this. To get the menu to look correct in VLC, I had to switch to OpenGL for the video renderer.
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Well if you use Windows or Linux. MakeMKV sounds like your best bet. And then use K3b to make blurays on Linux. Imgburn on Windows.In this instance yes. But I normal do run Linux.
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See this exact thing works for most of them. But I have 1 specific set of discs that either crashes VLC, loads to a black screen, or displays a bunch of corrupted video. I have confirmed that the tracks are very much not corrupted.
That is exactly what I've been doing. Most of the discs rip perfectly and run fine. But there is 1 specific set of discs that just either crash the player, load to a black screen, or just display corrupted pixels. I have verified that the files are not corrupted too.Well if you use Windows or Linux. MakeMKV sounds like your best bet. And then use K3b to make blurays on Linux. Imgburn on Windows.
Which disk is it?That is exactly what I've been doing. Most of the discs rip perfectly and run fine. But there is 1 specific set of discs that just either crash the player, load to a black screen, or just display corrupted pixels. I have verified that the files are not corrupted too.
All 4 discs of the Japanese AIR anime. These were made at the same time as the Kanon disc set by the same manufacturer and they work fine. These were imported and I am doing this on a Region A drive.Which disk is it?
http://fvonline-db.bplaced.net/All 4 discs of the Japanese AIR anime. These were made at the same time as the Kanon disc set by the same manufacturer and they work fine. These were imported and I am doing this on a Region A drive.
That is exactly what I've been doing. Most of the discs rip perfectly and run fine. But there is 1 specific set of discs that just either crash the player, load to a black screen, or just display corrupted pixels. I have verified that the files are not corrupted too.
Oh, neat. That's good to know.
(What's so important about "Bellsoft Java"? I've never heard of that before.)
It wouldn't have surprised me if some insanely subtle discrepancy had crept in somehow.Bellsoft is just an OpenJDK distribution. Like how Linux has multiple distributions, so does Java outside of Oracles version.
I guess you "have" to buy their $80 product for that functionality, though?On a side note, DVDFab's "PlayerFab" played the menus without a separate Java install and also had no lag when navigating the menus.
I guess you "have" to buy their $80 product for that functionality, though?