LOOMAX S-500

Hier können Sie alle Software. Drivers sowie das Firmware Update runterladen.

To download all Loomax Software, drivers and frimware update.
Hier kunt u alle Software, Drivers en Firmware Update downloaden

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How to convert:

MPEG to DVD

DVD to MPEG

S-VCD to DVD

DVD to S-VCD

VCD to DVD

DVD to VCD

MP3 to WMA

WMA to MP3

MP3 to CD

WAV to MP3

WAV to WMA

MP3 to WAV

WMA to WAV

Peer-2-peer

peer-to-peer

skype

voip

torrent

bittorrent

freeware

shareware

limeware

kazaa

bitlord

piratebay

 

  • Runs on Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD (and probably other Unices) and does not depend on anything produced in Redmond - pure Open Source!
  • Rip to harddisk, on the fly or from an existent DVD image
  • Select audio track(s), viewing angle(s), multitple titles
  • Rip as much audio tracks as you like into one AVI/OGG/SVCD file
  • Supports nearly all of transcode's video codecs, e.g: divx4, divx5, xvid, xvidcvs, ffmpeg, fame, opendivx and mpeg2enc
  • DivX/Xvid multipass encoding
  • (S)VCD modes, with multiple audio tracks for SVCD
  • Integrated video bitrate calculator based on target size resp. number of discs
  • Automatic splitting of the target files for best fit on the specified number of discs
  • Several deinterlace filter presets
  • Audio AC3 and PCM passthrough
  • Audio MP3 encoding
  • Audio volume maximizing and/or range compression
  • OGG/Vorbis support, quality and bitrate based, adjusting the optimal video bitrate after audio transcoding in quality mode
  • WAV file creation from a selected audio track
  • Subtitle rendering and vobsub creation
  • Support for all transcode video filters, with realtime configuration and video preview
  • Live video transcoding preview window
  • Chapter mode: one file per chapter
  • Use your favorite movie player for preview
  • Provide frame clipping, resizing and final clipping
  • Powerful auto adjusting of all clip & zoom parameters
  • Adjust clipping area using drag and drop
  • dvd::rip's zoom calculator let you adjust every possible parameter, if you like to do so
  • Two resize modes: fast and high quality resizing
  • Simple but easy to use CD burning facility
  • Last but not least a comprehensive cluster mode, which let you use all your Linux/Unix hardware for parallel encoding

DVD copying can be confusing to some individuals while others don't seem to be bothered by it.   If you are one of those people that need a little extra help.   Here are a couple of steps that you can follow on your way to making perfect DVD copies.  

DVD Copying Basics
Getting set up to copy a DVD is not as simple as buying a software product and a pack of disks.   You must make sure that you have an appropriate burner for the job, the correct media (disks) and a software product suited to your needs and preferences.   For those of you who have never copied a DVD before, this page illustrates the DVD copy process and will help select the right tools to get the job done.

Overview of the DVD copying software
First, you'll insert your original DVD into a DVD reader on your computer.

The DVD copy software then rips (or decrypts then pulls a copy of) the entire DVD to your hard drive.

Next, the copy software converts the hard drive copy of your ripped DVD file to a format that will allow the data to be burned (or copied) onto a blank DVD or set of CDs.   (CDs containing video are called VCDs–Video Compact Disks, or SVCDs–Super Video Compact Disks.)

You direct the software to burn the video on the device of your choice-either a DVD burner or a CD burner.   Your particular hardware, recording disks and copy software must be compatible with one another, however, to accomplish this.   Since several choices are available, you should carefully review your options.

Select DVD copying software
Research the features of the different software products to find one that matches your preferences and needs, including the requirements of your computer.   In addition to the Side-by-Side comparisons on the home page of this website, each product we've evaluated contains a separate review page with in-depth comments about product features and performance.   Pay attention to comments about the user-friendliness also; you'll want software with a good help document as well as telephone or online support if you are new to DVD copying.   If you are unfamiliar with the terms commonly used in DVD copying, consult the Feature Definitions page

Choose your burner and disk
Before you purchase software, determine if you will be making copies on a DVD burner or a CD burner.   You'll need a DVD drive to read your original DVD, but you don't necessarily need a DVD burner as the destination device for your new copy; a CD burner works too.   CDs hold less data, so in order to copy an entire movie to CD you must either sacrifice resolution or use up several CDs.   Typically, the data from 7 CDs can fit onto a single DVD.

The advantage of using your CD burner to produce DVD copies is cost–many computers already have a CD burner installed, and recordable CDs are cheaper than recordable DVDs.   Also, many home DVD players now support playing video CDs.   But most people prefer the simplicity of single disk, high resolution copies that the DVD medium allows and consider these results worth the investment in a DVD burner–especially since the price of DVD burners has dropped significantly.

There are several different formats of recordable disks available. You'll typically see both DVD-R and DVD+R writable disks.   For more information on disk types, read Which is Better, DVD- R or DVD+R?   Why so many formats? Competing manufacturers develop the disks in different formats and the hardware to support them.   Eventually, one DVD format will probably dominate the market, as has occurred with CDs.

Be aware that if you buy a DVD+R burner you must use DVD+R disks; the requirement is the same with DVD-R burners and disks.   Consumers make the common mistake of believing all DVD disks are supported by all burners.   If you want to pay a little more, you can purchase a DVD writer that allows you to copy in both DVD+R or DVD-R formats.

Meeting minimum system requirements
In addition to considering your burner needs, determine if the processing power of your PC is sufficient (speed, RAM, storage space).   Even if your system meets minimum requirements, DVD copying is a resource-intensive chore for your computer, so a more powerful machine will greatly enhance your copy performance.   Each product we review lists the minimum requirements for your computer on the Product Details pages.

DVD ripping isn't hard, you just have to make sure that you have the pieces necessary to make it work.

 

If you are sick and tired of hearing about MP3s because you don't know what they are, or you download them like crazy and still have no idea what they are apart from songs, then this little primer's for you.

Currently, MP3 is the most widely used format for storing digital music on computer hard drives and trading it over the Internet. Why? One reason is compression, one of those rare computer terms that accurately describes itself. Compression takes a file -- a text document, picture, song, and -- you guessed it -- makes it smaller.

If you pop a normal, commercially produced music CD into your computer and look at one of the four-minute songs, you'll find it's about 40 megabytes (MBs) in size. What does that mean? Not much, except that it's relatively large.

How large? Considering one floppy disc holds 1.4 MBs of information, to store that single four-minute song would take about 29 floppies. At that size, it's a bit inconvenient to try and share, or even store on your computer's hard drive, but what if you could make that file much, much smaller? That's what MP3 does.

MP3 is actually short for MPEG-1 audio layer 3. Without getting too technical, MPEG refers both to the organization, the Moving Pictures Experts Group, which sets certain standards for the compression of digital video and audio, and to the compression itself.

Huh? Just know that MP3 is a particular type of compression, and that it's a pretty good one. Audio layer 3, the "3" of "MP3," allows for audio compression at a 12:1 ratio. That means that once compressed using the MP3 algorithm, our four-minute, 40-MB song is now only about 3.5 MBs.

But that's only part of the reason it's so popular. There are scads of compression algorithms floating around that crunch down an audio file to a smaller size, but many of them (or many early ones anyway) result in a file of such poor quality that it's not worth listening to.

One of the beauties of MP3, is that it not only results in a much smaller file, but one without a perceptible drop-off in audio quality. There's some loss, but only audiophile types would likely deem it unacceptable. For most people, there's not enough of a quality drop to preclude listening.

So now you've got a file that's small and of pretty good audio quality. Nice, if you want to back up your CD collection to a computer hard drive. Rather, it's the ability to share these things via the Internet that's fueled the proliferation of the MP3 file format. And there are two, possibly three, primary factors that have made MP3s so Net-friendly (or made the Net so MP3-friendly).

One is the increasing availability of faster Internet connections. With cable modems and DSL, people are now able to download MP3 files (that is, songs) in a matter of seconds. Even with a modem and a relatively slow dial-up Internet connection, patient surfers can still retrieve MP3s in a not-too-taxing eight minutes, give or take.

Second, MP3 isn't owned by anyone -- sort of. Various companies and researchers have MPEG patents, but you don't have to pay a license fee to Microsoft or Apple or RealNetworks to use MP3. Plus, there are dozens, maybe hundreds, of free or really cheap players floating around that understand MP3s and play them back on your computer.

Also, there are dozens of free or really cheap rippers and encoders floating around, applications that pull songs off of CDs, crunch them down, and write them to your computer's hard drive. MP3 has become a de facto standard because no company has an exclusive, proprietary claim on it and it involves minimal hassle.

In other words, everyone uses it because everyone else uses it, and it's easy to use.

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