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Convert DVD to OGV
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Total Video Audio Converter converts DVD files to OGV quickly. With
a simple and user-friendly interface, Total Video Audio Converter makes DVD to OGV
conversion quite easy, and helps you to embed
video on your website using HTML5 easily.
Total Video Audio Converter is a professional and easy-to-use video Converter Software
that converts video files at fast speed and high quality. The software converts
any formats to popular video formats such as M4B (MPEG-4 audiobook), PNG image sequence, OGM, SWF, MPG, WebM (VP8), M4V, etc.
It could convert WebM to BMP image sequence, MOV to AAC, XVID to FLAC, H263 to WebM (VP8), VOB to CAF (Core Audio Format), and so on.
Total Video Audio Converter supports batch conversion and, is full compatible
with 32-bit and 64-bit editions of Windows 10/8/7/Vista/XP/2000.
What is DVD?
DVD stands for Digital Versatile/Video Disc. In theory, this allows the
motion picture studios to control the various aspects of a release (including
content, date and price) on a region-by-region basis, or ensure the success
of "staggered" or delayed cinema releases from country to country.
The MPEG program stream has provisions for non-standard data (as AC-3,
DTS, LPCM or subtitles used in VOB files) in the form of so-called private
streams. DVD-Video discs respectively refer to properly formatted and structured
video content. It uses MPEG-2 for video compression, with AC-3, DTS or
MPEG audio for multi-channel audio support. A DVD holds a minimum of 4.7GB
of data, enough for a full-length movie. DVDs are commonly used as a medium
for digital representation of movies and other multimedia presentations
that combine sound with graphics. The subtitle tracks are contained within
the VOB file of the DVD. The official allowed formats for the audio tracks
on a DVD Video are: PCM: 48 kHz or 96 kHz sampling rate, 16 bit or 24 bit
Linear PCM, 2 to 6 channels, up to 6,144 kbit/s; AC-3: 48 kHz sampling
rate, 1 to 5.1 (6) channels, up to 448 kbit/s; DTS: 48 kHz or 96 kHz sampling
rate, 2 to 6.1 channels, Half Rate (768 kbit/s) or Full Rate (1,536 kbit/s);
MP2: 48 kHz sampling rate, 1 to 7.1 channels, up to 912 kbit/s. The DVD
specification supports disks with capacities of from 4.7GB to 17GB and
access rates of 600KBps to 1.3 MBps. The maximum chapters allowed per title
is 99 and the maximum titles allowed per DVD is 99. One of the best features
of DVD drives is that they are backward-compatible with CD-ROMs, meaning
they can play old CD-ROMs, CD-I disks, and video CDs, as well as new DVD-ROMs.
What is OGV?
OGV is an Ogg Vorbis video file that uses Ogg Vorbis audio. In addition,
the OGV contains a video stream that uses one or more codecs, e.g. Theora
or DivX. However there are currently no Theora decoder chips in production,
and portable media players, smartphones and similar devices with limited
computing power rely on such chips to provide efficient playback. Further
work on adaptive quantization, as well as overall detailed subjective tuning
of the codec, is still to come. Theora is an open and royalty-free lossy
video compression technology being developed by the Xiph.Org Foundation
as part of their Ogg project. Based upon On2 Technologies' VP3 codec, Theora
competes with MPEG-4, WMV, and similar low-bitrate video compression schemes.
Theora supports intra-coded frames and forward-predictive frames, but not
bi-predictive frames which are found in H.264 and VC-1. The Theora I bitstream
format was frozen in June 2004 after the libtheora 1.0alpha3 release. Xiph.Org,
the developers of the OGV format, provide a DirectShow codec pack that
enables software developers to include support for OGV files in both open-source
and commercial applications. The Theora I Specification was completely
published in 2004. Any later changes in the specification are minor updates.
Evaluations of the VP3 and early Theora encoders found their subjective
visual quality was inferior to contemporary video codecs. More recently
however, Xiph developers have compared the 1.1 Theora encoder to YouTube's
H.264 and H.263+ encoders, in response to concerns raised in 2009 about
Theora's inferior performance by Chris DiBona, a Google employee. They
found the results from Theora to be nearly the same as YouTube's H.264
output, and much better than the H.263+ output.
How to Convert DVD to OGV?
- Free Download Total Video Audio Converter
- Install the Program by Step-by-step Instructions
- Launch Total Video Audio Converter
- Choose DVD Location
Click "Add DVD" to select DVD location.
Select DVD location such as DVD drive or a folder that DVD data has been copied
to, and then click OK. DVD to OGV Converter Software will open DVD
title and get file information of the file such as width, height, frame rate,
video bit rate, audio sample rate, audio bit rate, audio channels, and then display
the information of DVD file at conversion list.
- Choose Output Format
Click on combo box of output format and then choose "to OGV".
- [Optional, for advanced user]
Set Encoding Parameters
If you want to change OGV encoding parameters such as bit rate, frame rate, video
size, please click "Options".
And then, switch to tab "Video & Audio" and then set options.
- Convert DVD to OGV
Click "Convert" to convert all DVD files in list to OGV format.
The software is converting DVD files to OGV.
- Play & Browse
When conversion completes, you can right-click converted item and choose "Play
Destination" to play the outputted OGV file; or choose "Browse Destination
Folder" to open Windows Explorer to browse the outputted OGV file.
- Done
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DVD to OGV Software is 100% clean and safe to
install. It's certified by major download sites.
Convert DVD to OGV Related Topics:
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