

I've done a decent amount of Googling, but feel free to show me up with your better Google-fu, and all I found that was related was that forum post and this Git repo that uses MakeMKV to automate ripping. This (unanswered) forum post makes the good point, I think, that the GUI is capable of ripping specific titles without having to do a rescan. The usage.txt file from the MakeMKV site shows how to rip a single title, and there is also an option to rip all titles but nothing about two or more specific titles. Otherwise, if you just loop over each title separately then makemkvcon does a full disc rescan which is a big waste of time. Say I want to rip titles 0, 2 and 7 then I would expect a command something like this would be available makemkvcon64 mkv disc:0 0,2,7 "\path\to\output\dir"


No additional software is required for conversion or decryption.Fast conversion - converts as fast as your drive can read data.Preserves all meta-information (track language, audio type).Preserves all video and audio tracks, including HD audio.Reads Blu-ray discs protected with latest versions of AACS and BD+.There are many players that can play MKV files nearly on all platforms, and there are tools to convert MKV files to many formats, including DVD and Blu-ray discs.Īdditionally MakeMKV can instantly stream decrypted video without intermediate conversion to wide range of players, so you may watch Blu-ray and DVD discs with your favorite player on your favorite OS or on your favorite device. The MKV format can store multiple video/audio tracks with all meta-information and preserve chapters. It converts the video clips from proprietary (and usually encrypted) disc into a set of MKV files, preserving most information but not changing it in any way. MakeMKV is a format converter, otherwise called "transcoder". MakeMKV is your one-click solution to convert video that you own into free and patents-unencumbered format that can be played everywhere.
