TBH I doubt very much that youd have any issues whatsoever playing a ripped DVD that you own(ed).įor 100% cover keep the DVD somewhere (loft?) but nobody that would actually care will find out, and if they did, i honestly can t see that they'd chase a single person watching it solely themself - its not as if you are sticking it on P2P and distributing it globally. I don't think I'm breaching any laws here now am I? I vaguely remember that it is now OK to take copies of legally purchased CDs and DVDs as backups for personal use. I assume they have DRM on them although it will be over a decade old DRM, maybe even over 2 decades old but whatever DVD ripper I use will need to be able to rip whatever was the standard for commercial UK-sold retail DVDs at the time. All the DVDs were commercially purchased and are DVDs rather than Blu-Rays. My three questions are.ġ - Is this the best idea? I also have Plex on my NVidia Shield TV so maybe that would be another option but remember that I do want the full DVD menu functionality.Ģ - Has anyone here successfully played DVDs with full menu functionality from a ripped ISO file using Kodi?ģ - What DVD ripping software would people recommend for Windows 10? Free would be best given I only have fewer than 10 rips to do. I already use Kodi and am told that Kodi plays ISO files of DVDs beautifully including the full menu experience so I'm thinking the way to do this is to rip each of my DVDs to a single ISO file using ripping software on my Windows 10 PC and then put the ISOs onto my Kodi system. launching into the DVD menu since some of them have alternative commentary soundtracks on them and extra documentaries, the-making-of features. I'd like to get them stored on a hard drive and be able to play them just like on a DVD player, i.e. I want to get rid of my DVD player and have a few (fewer than 10) old DVDs that I don't want to lose access to.
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