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Posts tagged dvd
WDTV HD Media Player How-To Part IV
Nov 17th
Posted by indyadmin1974 in Nerd Stuff
Tagging your newly transcoded file with DVD cover art
This is the final post in a series of small tutorials on getting the most out of your WDTV HD Media Player.
I am sure there are multiple programs out there to tag MP4 files (which is the type of media file I decided to use when transcoding my DVDs to a smaller format). However, I found that MetaX for Windows works very well.
(note upon writing, I found some issues with Windows 7 and MetaX for Windows)
***An update from the MetaX for Windows forum suggests that you uninstall Microsoft Office Grove. I have verified that this works***
Let’s get started!
So if you don’t tag your videos, this is similar to what you would see after finishing the transcoding process:
With a little mojo, this is what we’ll see:
As my note says above, I had some trouble with MetaX for Windows and Windows 7, but I don’t have any other version of Windows to test so it may be a bug in general.
Here is what I do to tag MP4 files that I transcoded:
- Open MetaX
- Click the folder icon and browse to the MP4 file that you created in Part III (E:\valkyrie.mp4 in my example) and click Open.
If it asks for the type of file, select the appropriate one (Movie in my example):
You’ll notice that on the left hand side you’ll see that the Results field gets populated with different tags.
I select the tag that shows the DVD cover art that most closely matches the cover art of the DVD you copied.
There are several different tabs with information about the DVD that you could add to the tags, but unless you are going to use some sort of DVD library software, only select the check box for the DVD art.
Again this program allows you to do multiple files to a queue so you can do them all at once. Once you have selected all of the files you want, it’s time to write the queue. To do that, click the red arrow:
MetaX will then copy the original file into a folder called ‘deleted’ inside of the directory where your original file is located. This is usually the longest part of the process.
The program then writes the tags and that’s it! You should now see cover art for your MP4 file:
WD TV HD Media Player How-To Part II
Nov 17th
Posted by indyadmin1974 in Nerd Stuff
Ripping the DVD to a local hard drive
This is a continuation of my previous post.
In this step we use AnyDVD to copy a DVD to a local hard drive.
- Right click on the http://www.slysoft.com/en/anydvd.html icon in your task bar (looks like a fox) and select Rip Video DVD to Harddisk:

You should see this screen:

- Select your source and destination directories

- Click the Copy button

Once the copy is complete you should see the following folder structure
E:\VALKYRIE\VIDEO_TS
The VIDEO_TS folder is what you’ll use as your source for transcoding the video in the next step.
**You could also do this directly from the DVD instead of copying it locally.**
WD TV HD Media Player How-To – Part I
Nov 12th
Posted by indyadmin1974 in Nerd Stuff
***Beware that this How-To may not be entirely ‘legal’***
I purchased this media player earlier this year in the intention of getting rid of my DVD collection in favor of having the media on hard disk. Not only does this save space, but it allows me to easily make a backup in case of drive failure.
After some research and letting some buddies at work be the guinnea pigs, I decided to go with the WDTV HD Media Player.
There were pros and cons to each of the products I researched, but the WDTV had the fewest. In addition to having the features I was looking for (ability to plug in multiple drives, HDMI output, upgradeable firmware) it has a great user forum.
The other great feature is the ability to support multiple formats:
File Formats Supported
Music – MP3, WMA, OGG, WAV/PCM/LPCM, AAC, FLAC, Dolby Digital, AIF/AIFF, MKA
Photo – JPEG, GIF, TIF/TIFF, BMP, PNG
Video -MPEG1/2/4, WMV9, AVI (MPEG4, Xvid, AVC), H.264, MKV, MOV (MPEG4, H.264),
MTS, TP, TS
Playlist – PLS, M3U, WPL
Subtitle -SRT (UTF-8), SMI, SUB, ASS, SSA
Note:
- MPEG2/4, H.264, and WMV9 supports up to 1920x1080p 24fps, 1920x1080i 30fps, 1280x720p 60fps resolution
- An audio receiver is required for surround sound output. AAC/Dolby Digital decodes in 2 channel output only
- JPEG does not support CMYK or loss less.
- BMP supports uncompressed format only.
- TIF/TIFF supports single layer only.
So enough of the technical stuff. Let me explain how I got my movies on a hard drive.
Prerequisites:
DVD reader/writer
High capacity USB 2.0 (older version of USB will work, but the performance isn’t as good IMHO) – Mine is a 420GB Western Digital drive that I got for $100.
Dual-Core processors at the minimum. I have a machine with dual Quad core processors and one full-length film takes ~30-40 minutes to convert (using the process that I use)
At least 40-60GB worth of free space on the internal hard drive (remember a full sized DVD will be between 3.5 and 5GB)
*DVD ripping software
Optional:
Video transcoder software
File Tagging Software
Here is exactly what I used:
Windows 7 Enterprise
Dell Precision Workstation 490
OS Name Microsoft Windows 7 Enterprise
Version 6.1.7600 Build 7600
System Manufacturer Dell Inc.
System Model Precision WorkStation 490
System Type x64-based PC
Processor Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5335 @ 2.00GHz, 1995 Mhz, 4 Core(s), 4 Logical Processor(s)
Processor Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5335 @ 2.00GHz, 1995 Mhz, 4 Core(s), 4 Logical Processor(s)
Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 4.00 GB
Total Physical Memory 4.00 GB
AnyDVD – DVD ripping software (the de-facto DVD ripping software – also has a 21 day evaluation license)
Handbrake – Open-Source DVD transcoding software
MetaX for Windows – Open Source File Tagging software
Once you have all the software installed it’s time to start ripping. I will describe that process in my next post.
*Using DVD ripping software is not entirely legal, even if you pay for it. Read the license agreement of the DVDs you are ripping to find out the consequences of ripping a DVD, even if no profit is involved.
