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Originally Posted by tahclep Can anyone explain in laymans language why Alan's suggestion is better for ripping ?  |
It's not Alan's suggestion; it's Slysoft's suggestion.
Anydvd ripper uses an old version of FixVTS, which is often not necessary or can just create problems.
Clonedvd2 does most of the work that is necessary (so that you rarely, if ever, need to use FixVTS).
1. The best way to rip using Anydvd is to use Clonedvd2. If you can't or are not willing to do that, this is how you rip using Anydvd:
2. With the latest version of Anydvd running, drag and drop the video_ts folder to your desktop using Windows Explorer. Alternatively, you don't need to rip at all and can just directly import the disc into whatever burning application you want, provided Anydvd is running in the background. You don't necessarily need to rip first at all. Not having to rip before using a burning application is one significant advantage of using Anydvd.
3. If you can't get what you want using #1 and #2 first, then you right click on the fox icon on your toolbar and select rip video-dvd to hard disk--but only if methods 1 and 2 fail first. This method uses an old version of FixVTS, which is often not required.