Personally, I like the great support. It has to be frequently updated to
counter the latest anti-copy schemes on the latest releases. Hey, I bought
it why shouldn't I be able to rip or copy it? DRM is anti-consumer IMHO
and does nothing to stop the real pirates profiting off the work of others.
On Mon, 09 Aug 2010 04:48:40 -0500, Steve Tomporowski <didym...@gmail.com>
wrote:
Yeah, that's why I sent a message to the list, the new version does the
same thing. Amazing how such a perfect program has to be updated! Now
I've found a different way to get it to work, I followed their
directions on trying to rip the disk with Imgburn first. It ripped all
the way successfully, then surprise! All of a sudden, AnyDVD could read
the disk! [extreme sarcasm]. The first run through Imgburn complained
that the disk was protected, and I could try anyways. I did, was
successful, then tried it again and it didn't complain and neither did
AnyDVD.
On 8/8/2010 11:06 PM, Scoobydo wrote:
Maybe a stupid question but have you updated it to the latest build? I
download and install a new version 1 or 2 times per month. That's how
rapidly they evolve it.
On Sun, 08 Aug 2010 19:23:43 -0500, Steve Tomporowski
<didym...@gmail.com> wrote:
Does anyone have any experience with AnyDVD? In short, on two
different machines, it refuses to read these BBC disks, despite being
able to play the discs on these same machines. It gives a long-winded
message about the disk is dirty, bad, or your drive is not on the
right region. Then, of course, their forum is pretty darn arrogant
about it, that it is unequivocally your fault, non AnyDVD.
I probably would not have been bothered if it were one disk, but it's
disks from two different sets. The rather funny part is, on one
computer, if I enable AnyDVD's logging, then it will read the disk.
Thanks...Steve
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