Posterous theme by Cory Watilo

Filed under: Film

Trenger du ubegrenset synkronisering mellom dine datamaskiner?

Image

Libox.com er en opensource løsning der du kan synkronisere dine
datamaskiner. Dette kan være med på å sikre dine verdifulle data.

Se for deg at du har noen Gig med bilder som du er redd for. Med denne tjenesten kan du lagre bildene på flere datamaskiner og holde disse synkronisert uavhengig av plassering. Dermed kan du og ha musikken, og filmene spredt på fleresteder. Libox støtter følgende formater:
Bilde: JPG ,GIF, PNG, BMP, JPEG.
Musikk: MP3, WAV, RMI, AIF, AIFC, AAC, AIFF, AU, SND, WMA, M4A, FLAC, OGG.
Video: WMV, MOV, M4V, FLV, MPEG, MPG, M2TS, AVI, MP4, QT, DIVX, MKV, 3GP, TS, YOUTUBE.

Hva med Blu-ray filmer på din Apple-enhet?

How to rip Blu-ray to iTunes for iPad, iPhone 4, iPod and Apple TV?

Rip-bluray-to-itunes-for-ipad-

As we all know, Apple’s popular iPad, iPhone 4, and other digital media players like iPod, iPhone, and Apple TV are all using iTunes to manage the digital music and video files on them. That is to say, to watch a Blu-ray movie on your iPad, iPhone 4, iPod and Apple TV, you need to rip Blu-ray to iTunes previously. Some of you may have not figured out a proper way to rip Blu-ray to iTunes, so to help you out of this problem, this guide is going to show you a detailed way on how to rip Blu-ray to iTunes for iPad, iPhone 4, iPod and Apple TV. Just feel free to see if it is what you are looking for.

Les mer...

Hvordan: Konvrtere DVD og videoer for iPhone, iPad og andre iOS-enheter

Har du flere Apple-enheter som du ønsker å bruke til filmfremvisning, har du noen utfordeinger: Forskjellige enheter takler ulik oppløsning og format.

Iphone

Jeg fant en grei artikkel i Macworld 24.8.10. Her er et lite utdrag. Resten leser du på nettsidene til Macworld: How to: Convert DVDs and videos for iOS devices

How to convert DVDs for iPhone, iPad, and other Apple devices

Get your movies and other files onto your iOS devices

[Editor’s note: The MPAA and most media companies argue that you can’t legally copy or convert commercial DVDs for any reason. We (and others) think that, if you own a DVD, you should be able to override its copy protection to make a backup copy or to convert its content for viewing on other devices. Currently, the law isn’t entirely clear one way or the other. So our advice is: If you don’t own it, don’t do it. If you do own it, think before you rip.]

 

If you’re like a lot of our readers (and editors) you have more than one Apple media device on which you play videos—a click wheel iPod, iPod touch, iPhone, iPad, and Apple TV. While having such a collection allows you to play videos in just about any environment, it does pose this question: If you want to rip a DVD you own or encode a video on your hard drive just once—for all your Apple devices—what’s the best option? Two answers present themselves:
Mer...