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WonderFox DVD Video Converter 30.7 estaba como Giveaway el día n 24 de octubre de 2024
WonderFox DVD Video Converter es un conversor de video y extractor de DVD con todas las funciones de primera categoría, que proporciona el proceso en un solo paso para convertir DVD, video y audio, así como un descargador de video que ayuda a descargar videos 8K, 4K, 1080P, 720P desde Más de 300 sitios.
WonderFox DVD Video Converter Suscripción de 1 año. Sólo $19,95 en lugar de $34,95.
Licencia de por vida de WonderFox DVD Video Converter. Sólo $24,95 en lugar de $39,95.
Paquete familiar WonderFox DVD Video Converter (5 piezas). Sólo $44,95 en lugar de $49,95.
Windows 7/ 8/ 8.1/ 10/ 11; Processor: > 1 GHz Intel or AMD CPU; Free Hard Disk Space: 50 MB or more; RAM: 512 MB or above; Language: English, German, Spanish, Japanese
91.7 MB
Lifetime
$59.95
Comentarios en WonderFox DVD Video Converter 30.7
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This is a nice software with all kind of goodies, but it is still slow to convert videos. About 2 hours to do a 1080/720 and even longer for 4K/8K. Not sure where the acceleration engine setting is on this. I was hoping for more. Still, if you don't have software like this, this is a keeper. Easy to use.
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Duke Blues, for the fastest video encoding, if you have an Nvidia GPU, try software that uses it more for the encoding process, e.g., NVEnc or CudaCoder. For Intel GPUs you want to use software that utilizes Intel's Quick Sync. The disadvantage is that GPU-based video encoding will be [slightly] lower quality than software based. Depending on the selected output format, the ffmpeg code libraries used by most converters OTOH offer very limited hardware acceleration -- it's not the ffmpeg devs' fault, but the encoders themselves that it uses. Note that if you do use something like CudaCoder you will have to handle DRM beforehand.
That said, most video players will resize / enlarge video on the fly, often doing a better job than resampling during encoding. Reencoding video also loses quality -- DVD video is purposely lower quality to discourage reencoding. If you can live with the video file sizes, converting DVD video to mpg2 files without reencoding preserves original quality, and takes almost no time, but not all players work with mpg2 nowadays -- VLC does. To improve the appearance of upscaled subs you can use something like SubtitleEdit to OCR them to an .srt file, which most players can handle.
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