Tech Support > Computer Hardware > CD/DVD > Burning DVD Shrink files with DVD Decrypter
Burning DVD Shrink files with DVD Decrypter
Posted by *jimanno@comcast.net* on June 23rd, 2004


Hi,

I read somewhere, on this group I think, that DVD Shrink can be set to
automatically burn using DVD Decrypter. I see the check box for
automatically burning with Nero, but I don't see anything about DVD
Decrypter. Can anyone explain how to do this?

Thanks,
Jim
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Posted by BK24 on June 23rd, 2004



<*jimanno@comcast.net*> wrote in message
news:m0mjd05sf4u3fn52os04le4j6tqr58k256@4ax.com...
used in conjunction with other burn programs.



Posted by Zimmy on June 23rd, 2004


When you select "Burn" and ISO image in the latest version of Shrink, there
is an option to launch DVDDecryptor to burn it.


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Posted by *jimanno@comcast.net* on June 23rd, 2004


"Zimmy" <zimmy@msn.com> wrote:


Thanks! That's what I was looking for.

Jim

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Posted by *jimanno@comcast.net* on June 24th, 2004


"Zimmy" <zimmy@msn.com> wrote:

I found the setting you gave me in the newsgroup. Before I waste a
disk, I wonder if you can tell me if the ISO file I burn to the disk
will play in my stand alone DVD player connected to my TV. I thought
there needed to be files for the video in a VIDEO_TS folder.

Any help appreciated.

Jim

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Posted by *jimanno@comcast.net* on June 24th, 2004


"Zimmy" <zimmy@msn.com> wrote:

I found the setting you gave me in the newsgroup. Before I waste a
disk, I wonder if you can tell me if the ISO file I burn to the disk
will play in my stand alone DVD player connected to my TV. I thought
there needed to be files for the video in a VIDEO_TS folder.

Any help appreciated.

Jim

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Posted by Gene E. Bloch on June 24th, 2004


*jimanno@comcast.net* wrote in
news:m3akd0566gtijugfsm5dm0o96q8g452f7h@4ax.com:

The ISO is an image of the disk. You need to tell your burner to
burn this image to the disk.

There is software (Nero ImageDrive comes to mind) that will treat an
ISO file like the CD or DVD that it is an image of. This lets you
look at the diredctory structure in the image or play the audio or
video in the image. That will help you believe that you have the
correct ISO image :-)

I do it all the time - like using my mapping S/W without having to
track the CD down. Quicker, too.

HTH,
Gino


--
Gene E. Bloch (Gino) phone 650.966.8481
Call me letters find me at domain blochg whose dot is com


Posted by Company Man on June 26th, 2004


Think of the of the ISO as an image of the complete DVD disc, VIDEO_TS
folder and all...


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Posted by *jimanno@comcast.net* on June 26th, 2004


"Company Man" <spook@covert.invalid> wrote:

That's kinda what I thought, but wanted to be sure. So when Decrytor
burns the disk, the result is the new disk has the VIDEO_TS folder on
it for the DVD player to read the files from?

Thanks for the info,
Jim
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Posted by Company Man on June 26th, 2004



<*jimanno@comcast.net*> wrote in message
news:jfmpd090mc5jk95p0gq8naog79l5g24u98@4ax.com...
Sure, look at it this way, files and directories present on a DVD disc
eventually map to a finite and exact array of 0's and 1's. The ISO is a map
of that array, so everything in the ISO matches everything in the disk that
is being imaged. One doesn't edit an ISO directly; the ISO data is passed
into other programs which decode, rip and (re)format. There are even tools
to mount the ISO image on a virtual DVD Rom, and be available to your movie
player software and tools, just as if the data were being read from actual
DVD media.



Posted by *jimanno@comcast.net* on June 26th, 2004


Thanks Gino. It worked perfectly.

Jim

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Posted by Christopher on December 3rd, 2004


CloneDVD2 will also burn DVDs using the files that DVDShrink creates.
That way, you can burn multiple copies without having to re-rip the
DVD, if by chance, you need more than one copy right off the bat.

Digital9x.


On Wed, 23 Jun 2004 19:07:21 -0400, *jimanno@comcast.net* wrote:



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