The only thing I've seen that throws it off is the bonus DVDs. I wanted to
extract some deleted seens from a Starwars one, and it couldn't get to them.
That's such a shame.

-----Original Message-----
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of
Christopher Chaltain
Sent: Sunday, May 12, 2013 6:42 PM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: Dvd Audio Extraction

I would agree. I've tried other programs, but they all require you to know a
bit about the files on your DVD. Sometimes extracting the audio from the
right file can be a bit hit or miss. DVD Audio Extractor takes any guess
work out of it.

On 05/12/2013 05:27 PM, James Scholes wrote:
> DVD Audio Extractor is, in my experience, great software and 
> definitely worth the money.  It's accessible, does exactly what it 
> says on the tin and does it well.  If you were looking to save some 
> money, I'm sure you could put something together using freeware like 
> FFmpeg or other less user-friendly tools, but DVD Audio Extractor ties 
> it all together in a convenient, easy-to-use package.
>
> As for alternative, similar applications, I honestly haven't tried 
> any, but nor have I felt the need to so make of that what you will.  
> The only feature I wish DVD Audio Extractor had was the ability to 
> name and tag individual titles, which would come in useful when 
> ripping box sets, but it's no great hardship using something like 
> Mp3tag to get the job done afterwards.  There is a fully-functional 
> 30-day trial of DVD AE available, so give it a spin and see what you
think.
>

--
Christopher (CJ)
chaltain at Gmail

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