Thursday, February 28, 2008

How to Make a Copy of DVD Movie on Mac OS X (include Leopard)

DVD Copy for Mac:

http://www.dvd-ripper-copy.com/dvd-copy-mac.html



1. A professional DVD copy program for Mac OS users to copy D9 and D5 DVD movies (D9 to D9 and D5 to D5);
2. Copy DVD movies with the original quality 100% preserved and remove DVD protection methods such as CSS, RC and RCE;
3. Offers two output methods: copy DVD to either a new DVD disc or save DVD in a folder on Mac machine.

Suppose you have created your masterpiece and burnt it to DVD using iDVD or iMovie. You only want this one copy and need hard drive space, so you trash the entire DVD project. Soon after, you find that you now need extra copies of the DVD. Or you are in deep love with a DVD movie and want to make a copy of it for eternal collection. What follows is the process of making DVD copies from any DVDs, whether they are copyright protected or not.

As most of us only have one DVD drive in our Macs, this will be a two-step process. First we will need to copy the information from the DVD to our hard drive and eject the original DVD. When we copy the original DVD, we will make a .dmg of it on our hard drive. A disc image is an exact and perfect clone of the original. Then we will insert a blank DVD and burn the DVD disc image to the blank DVD. Note: before starting copying the DVD to your hard disc, make sure you have enough disc space. You can select the DVD in the Finder and then press: command (apple key) - I to get info about the disc.

Or if you have DVD file stored in your Mac hard disc, within one step you can burn it to a blank DVD disc by inserting it to your hard drive.

Wondershare DVD Copy for Mac serves as such a tool to help you copy your DVD to a new DVD disc with the original DVD quality 100% preserved on your Mac machine. As to protected DVD movies, this Mac DVD Copy program can remove protection mechanisms such as CSS, RC and RCE. What’s more, it has the function of copying DVD disc to your Mac computer, which actually is what ripping a DVD actually refers to (not converting it into another format). Here I don't intend to elaborate on it.

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