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Suggestions for a DVD Video on Demand System?

An anonymous reader asks: "I was paid, with about 1000 DVD movies, by a video rental store that owed me money and then subsequently went out of business. I'd like to rip a couple hundred of them to a 1 TB disk array, and serve them up to my big screen, via a video on demand system. However, all the systems I can find for interfacing computer network to the plasma display only serve up the basic MPEG files, and not the entire ripped DVDs with their menus, etc. What systems would Slashdot readers suggest that could manage the ripped DVD files as a complete disk, and serve them up?"

11 of 651 comments (clear)

  1. If he's got plasma... by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The more I think of this situation, the more I think that the solutions are worse than the problem at this point. If he's got a plasma screen, he's not going to want to give up any video quality, so recompression really isn't an option.

    Maybe the best idea is to find him a high-quality DVD player and nice storage rack so that he can organize his 1000 DVD collection and show it off.

    Oh, wait, this is /. We like doing things the hard way...

    1. Re:If he's got plasma... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's nice, but it costs $1200 on sale and is a tempting target for thieves. Gimme one where the expensive bits are in the trunk any day.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    2. Re:If he's got plasma... by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 3, Insightful

      OK, so this person wants to but 200 DVDs on a 1+TB RAID. That could fit, provided you average 5GB per DVD.

      What does a 1TB RAID cost, and how much does it compare in cost to a 300-400 DVD Sony changer? I'm thinking the changer might cost half as much. I imagine it is quieter too.

  2. Re:Store the ISO's and then mount them by theparanoidcynic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Um, "mount -o loop"?
    Another possibility is to use vobcopy -m to decrypt the discs and dump the contents to your hard drive.
    Either way you can use --dvd-device under mplayer and probably something similar under xine to treat the directory in question as a DVD drive.

    --
    Only in a Slashdot fantasy can a Slackware install turn into several hours of sex . . . . .
  3. He found slashdot, but hasn't found Google? by telstar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1) Load browser
    2) Navigate to www.google.com
    3) Type "Play DVD from hard disk" in pretty little box
    4) Hit Enter
    5) Click first link

    Or just click here

    Is this really a problem for Slashdot? If I think about half of the shit I've submitted that got rejected, it's enough to make me not submit anything again. Sure, my submissions didn't have cool buzzwords like "video on demand", "terrabyte", and I don't own a plasma display, but they were articles whose answer wasn't the first darn response on a Google search. Subscribers ... Are you getting what you paid for?

    1. Re:He found slashdot, but hasn't found Google? by System.out.println() · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's already on another thread, but since it seems to need it over here:
      "What systems would Slashdot readers suggest that could manage the ripped DVD files as a complete disk, and serve them up?"
      I have seen maybe one response on this story that answers the question that actually got asked.

  4. Seriously, why? by JoeShmoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This isn't meant as flamebait but...why on earth would you want a video on demand system that uses the horrible bastard of an interface on most modern DVDs? Do you enjoy subjecting yourself to the mind-numbingly stupid Memento menus? Or the Ghostbuster DVD that repeats the same Ghostbuster riff ever five seconds?

    To be truly authentic, should this theoretical system also implement the "no fast forward" option during the FBI warning? How about the Coke commercials?

    Let's also have to select our audio settings each and every time we change to a new movie. Ignore the fact that your audio system probably changes configuration every two years if you are lucky, let's go ahead and have to choose Dolby 5.1 with English subs every time you pop in Cowboy BeBop.

    To me this is a problem in search of another problem. To do what you want is painfully simple. Save the DVDs to hard disk as images, then load in in Daemon Tools/Nero ImageDrive. Poof. Get a cheap PC and use one of the many thousand media management programs as a point and click interface. Have the icons load CUE files for the movies. For a bonus, using multiple virtual drives to load collections like Aliens Quadrilogy etc and then have a playlist to play them all one drive after another.

    Or...

    Rip them all to a nice quality XviD with AC3 audio, multiple audio tracks if there's a reason (Ebert commentary etc) and subtitle files. Store at least 4 times as many movies with barely any loss in quality, and then have make playlists that play the movie with settings optimized for your sound system and then play deleted scenes and other extras.

    Sorry if this seems like a rant, but if you want 1000 DVDs online, make images? Am I overlooking some obvious reason why this won't work?

    - JoeShmoe
    .

    --
    -- I wonder which will go down in history as the bigger failure: the War on Drugs or the War on Filesharing
  5. Re:Hollywood is never gonna help this... by jettoblack · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The ruling in the DVD X Copy case didn't state that ALL DVD ripping software is illegal. They only found that in this specific case, the software's primary purpose was copyright infringement, and it didn't have sufficient non-infringing use to support continued sale of the product.

    Its possible that other DeCSS products will not be tested in court, or will be found to have sufficient non-infringing (ie fair use) use to justify their existence.

  6. Re:I thought that too, but its legal by burris · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There is no such thing as a "fair use product." Fair Use is the term for the exception to the exclusive rights of Copyright holders.

    burris

  7. Re:1000 DVDs? by zbuffered · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So you're telling me that a rental store will pay an extra $70 for the rights to rent a movie for two weeks? They're going to recoup 10, 20 dollars of that back, max. What's the logic here?

    --
    Synergy is your friend
  8. Re:1000 DVDs? by LostCluster · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's closer to a 5 to 8 week distance. At $15 per week, that's $5 to $30 of profit per disc, plus the fact that they can recoop another $10 by selling most of the previously viewed disks when it moves out of the "new release" category and therefore demand will never be that high again.