Hi all, I have an old home movie DVD which I didn't store very well. I wanted to copy some of it and edit it to make a Christmas gift for relatives, but I can't read it due to some corruptions. I'm using vobcopy to get it onto my machine prior to editing, and the problem is that as soon as vobcopy comes across an error, it gives up totally. I was hoping there might be some way to persuade it to skip over the corrupted part and keep copying after that point. At least then I could use the undamaged parts of the movie to make my new compilation. Is this possible, my DVD player still seems able to play most of it, it just does the "jitter and skip" thing at a number of points. Any thoughts? I suppose I could re-digitize the output of the DVD player itself, but that sounds like a really yukky option. Cheers, Simon "You can tell whether a man is clever by his answers. You can tell whether a man is wise by his questions." — Naguib Mahfouz ____________________________________________________________________________________ Yahoo! Music Unlimited Access over 1 million songs. http://music.yahoo.com/unlimited -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
On Sunday 10 December 2006 13:12, Simon Roberts wrote:
Hi all,
I have an old home movie DVD which I didn't store very well. I wanted to copy some of it and edit it to make a Christmas gift for relatives, but I can't read it due to some corruptions. I'm using vobcopy to get it onto my machine prior to editing, and the problem is that as soon as vobcopy comes across an error, it gives up totally. I was hoping there might be some way to persuade it to skip over the corrupted part and keep copying after that point. At least then I could use the undamaged parts of the movie to make my new compilation. Is this possible, my DVD player still seems able to play most of it, it just does the "jitter and skip" thing at a number of points.
Any thoughts? I suppose I could re-digitize the output of the DVD player itself, but that sounds like a really yukky option.
Have you tried polishing the DVD? I assume it has scratches and maybe gouges. I have worked wonders (with a lot of elbow grease) by using a low abrasive cleaner like car polish or car wax. Test what you are going to use on an old CD or such to see if it helps. But I don't think I've ever made a DVD worse off after trying to reclaim it. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
participants (2)
-
Bruce Marshall
-
Simon Roberts