Last ride in I jumped on

Last ride in

I jumped on Netflix the moment I saw it nearly on day one and I havent looked back since. By the way, my Netflix bill has actually gone down since day one. No one is forcing you to pay this. Netflix is not wringing more money out of you. You are subscribing to a luxury service. If Harrison Fords 5 oclock shadow being sharper-than-real-life isnt worth an extra dollar to you, then by all means UNSUBSCRIBE. But lets have some perspective. You live in a society where you can sit on your 3k leather sofa in front of your 5k HD plasma big screen watching your 30 Blu-Ray DVDs on your 400 player and you want to complain about 1/month? This isnt corporate greed. Corporate greed is Monsanto poisoning the milk your children drink and then actively suppressing news stories about it. Corporate greed is removing entire mountain tops in West Virginia and dumping the waste into public drinking supplies because its quicker and therefore cheaper. But I can understand how that extra three cents a last ride in matters to you after all, its probably what the kid who made your designer sweater gets paid. Hello and welcome to the official Netflix Blog! We the blog authors are various members of the Netflix team. Were also rabid movie fans. We hope this will be a great forum for us to talk about what we are doing, and for you to tell us what you think. Convert Anything to iPad, iPod, Etc with RipBot You are using Internet Explorer This is a very, very old browser which does not support all modern websites. Update: This tutorial was getting slightly out of date, so I updated it to version BD Rebuilder 05 on 2/19/20 Well, I ve been getting more and more into Blu-ray last ride in recently, so I thought I would go ahead and post this nice tutorial and screencast combo! I ll be detailing how to do it with BD Rebuilder today, and I will be adding how-to s for other programs in the future. Rip your Blu-ray to a folder on your hard drive. Start up BD Rebuilder and you should see a main window like last ride in one below. Using the Browse buttons, select your source directory. I m using my Dark Knight Blu-ray in this example. Also, while your at it, select your Working directory. This is where your temporary files will be stored during the conversion process. Now, since I want to backup my entire Blu-ray menus, extras, etc, I want to check to make sure that I am in the correct backup mode by going to Mode Full Backup. There is one thing to remember here. A full backup means that you are backing up everything, so you have less space for your main movie, which means a reduced quality overall when you compress everything down. The alternative is to use the Movie-Only Backup mode, which as I m sure you can guess will only backup your main movie. That means no menus, special features, or anything else. This a very nice option, as it allows you to obtain the maximum amount of quality possible for your main movie. Swing on over to the Settings menu, and after making sure that your Encoder is set to X264, go to your Encoder Settings. As you can see, I have select my encoding priority to be Normal Priority. The reason for this is that I want my encode to run as fast as possible. I won t be using the computer during the process, so I don t care if other applications slow down. Now, if I were going to be using the computer, I would want to set my priority to Idle. Also take a look at my Quality settings. By default, Automatic Quality Settings is selected, which is normally what you will use/want. I have unchecked it for the sake of showing you the amount of options available if for some reason you do not want to go the automatic route. Usually I go ahead and stick with Automatic Quality Settings. Next, maneuver your mouse over to the Output Options menu. This is where we will be selecting our output size.

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