DVD X-Copy
rskarvan
Posts: 2,374
Hi. Does anyone use this program? What do you think?
Does it really work well? How about x-copy express? Does fitting it to one DVD reduce anything important?
I've seen the website... but, that is a biased group.
I'd like to hear opinions from REAL people.
As for me, I'm running a Dell 8250 with an internal Dell DVD burner. Haven't burnt any dvd's yet. Will DVD X-copy be simple to use and flawless?
Please let me know.
Thanks.
Does it really work well? How about x-copy express? Does fitting it to one DVD reduce anything important?
I've seen the website... but, that is a biased group.
I'd like to hear opinions from REAL people.
As for me, I'm running a Dell 8250 with an internal Dell DVD burner. Haven't burnt any dvd's yet. Will DVD X-copy be simple to use and flawless?
Please let me know.
Thanks.
Post edited by RyanC_Masimo on
Comments
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LSi 9/C/FX
Arcam AVR-200 -
There is a cheaper way to do it also. But it takes a few more steps.
You can download a DVD decrypter for free from http://www.doom9.org/
And you can purchase DVD2one from http://dvd2one.com/buy.php
So basically you decrypt the DVD, and you use dvd2one to shrink it so it will fit onto one disk. Then you burn that copy to disk. It is cheaper than the 100 dollars you will spend on DVDxcopy, but the process will take a little longer. So its entirely up to you. I do the decrypter way. It takes me about 1 hour to burn a dual layer disk (8gb). -
DVD Decrypter isn't bad, I've used it some myself.
The new version of DVD-X-Copy comes with a program to go to one DVD, or even CD I think. But the real advantage of the DVDXCopy is the ease of use and it just freaking works, and works really wellLSi 9/C/FX
Arcam AVR-200