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12-02-2011, 06:30 AM
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Site Staff / Media Project and Technical Adviser
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 3,983
Thanks: 112
Thanked 417 Times in 363 Posts
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You've simply overlooked it.
DVD Shrink works like this:
- Open a disc ISO image, or open files off a hard drive.
- Never open a disc directly. It's bad for the drive, and makes DVD Shrink work much slower. Beyond that, discs with copy protection generally cannot be read, so if you're trying to make an emergency copy of a rare disc, you'll have to rip it in something else first (like DVD Decrypter).
- Either re-author (keep movie only), or compress the full disc -- this is basically a pick-and-choose type editor.
- Under compression settings, deselect unwanted audio/subtitles, or tweak compression settings
- Click the big BACKUP button, which has several more tabs of options --
- For example, max smooth settings with deep analysis, which takes longest but looks best. In the era of quad core computers, calling it "longest" is almost a joke now, as it's at least as fast as realtime, if not quite a bit more. When DVD Shrink was still new and actively developed, it would take many hours.
- Disc title
- CPU priority (best to leave alone), and ability to have computer shut itself off when finished
- Remove regions by setting all of them
- Selecting the target device to burn the new copy, whether it's burned directly to a disc, or burned to an ISO image file on the hard drive.
- This is where you'll find "Create ISO image file: ISO image file and burn with ImgBurn"
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