Step 1: Defeat DVD Copy Protection
As soon as you drop a DVD in your DVD-ROM drive, AnyDVD will pop up with a message about your 21-day free trial. Click the Continue button and you’ll see the program’s primary window. If you have more than one DVD drive, you’ll see a tab for each drive. Click on the tab for the drive that contains the movie you want to rip and AnyDVD will display a host of useful information about what’s on the disc and what copy-protection schemes it has defeated.

AnyDVD Status Tab
If all you want to do at this point is rip the DVD to your hard drive or media server, open the disc in Windows Explorer (click on the Start Menu, choose Computer, and then right-click on the disc and select Explore. Locate the VIDEO_TS folder and drag it to whichever folder you wish to copy it). You might notice that there’s another file labeled AUDIO_TS, but you can ignore it because it will be empty unless the disc happens to contain DVD-Audio tracks in addition to the movie’s soundtrack, which isn’t likely. Our home-brew computer, which is based on a dual-core Intel Core 2 Duo E8600 CPU running at 3.33GHz and 4GB of DDR3 memory, copied the folder to our Windows Home Server rig across our gigabit wired network in 11 minutes and 38 seconds.
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Showing 25 comments
RSSshare you a cool blu-ray to iphone converter
http://www.rip-blu-ray.biz
http://apcmag.com/how_to_play_ripped_dvds_on_vi...
I use this one, you can check it out,
http://bit.ly/1i0Wop
You can find this Blu-ray Ripper here: http://www.pavtube.com/blu-ray-ripper
AnyDVD HD is good at removing all sorts of BD protections, but when it comes to file size compression, it can not do anything about it. What a pity!
You can find this Blu-ray Ripper here: http://www.pavtube.com/blu-ray-ripper
AnyDVD HD is good at removing all sorts of BD protections, but when it comes to file size compression, it can not do anything about it. What a pity