Is anyone else experiencing this? Thanks in advance. I can’t be 100% sure that it happened the first time after Catalina but I believe so. Around that time, I did a clean install of Catalina. I have no idea why this is happening but the only thing I can possibly point the finger at is macOS Catalina. It’s happened a few more times with other movies. I put the BR disc in and went to that part of the movie and the scenes didn’t jump as expected. And then watching further, it jumps back to the rest of the scene that was previously cut from and it became obvious what was happening. It was really obvious because the scene cut to another part of the movie that didn’t make sense and was so bad I knew right away that it couldn’t be a matter of bad editing. First time it happened was in John Wick 3. Within the last month or so, I noticed some of the rips are ripping incorrectly in that it has scenes that cut or “jump around”. However, I recently started having a problem that I’ve never experienced. This process is so routine for me that it’s become 2nd nature. I don’t encode them using handbrake, just leave them in their uncompressed. I rip Blu-Rays and 4K Blu-Rays using a UHD friendly drive. I’ve been using MakeMKV for several years now and absolutely love it. Instead of chapters, cell numbers can be specified.Hi all. The same selection may be specified by a single token 1:1-4 5-8 9-12 13-16. The string 1:1-4 1:5,6,7,8 1:9-12 1:13,14,15,16 specifies that title number 1 containing 16 chapters should be split into 4 titles, by 4 chapters in each. The string specifies that chapters 1-5 should be opened from title number 5 as a first title, and cells 3-14 followed by cells 16-21 should be opened as a second title. Plain number specifies chapter while number with prefix specifies cell. Portion of the title can be specified as single chapter/cell or a range of cells/chapters. The minimum addressable unit is a so called cell (historically named after movie film cell). blabbo wrote:On the Netflix disc, there is no 440.mpls or 487.mpls. In addition to title number, each token can specify exact parts of title to be opened. As a practical example title string 15 3 2 5 would instruct MakeMKV to open titles 15,3,2,5 - in that specific order and to assume that all titles are not fake. For example, if MakeMKV incorrectly identifies a certain title as fake, all you have to do is to note the title number (any DVD player can show this information) and enter it in title selection string. In a simplest case only title number can be specified - in this case MakeMKV will open title in exactly the same way as it would open it normally, with exception that all fake checks would be disabled. Simplified token syntax is - XX] where XX is a title number and yy is a chapter or cell number. The title selection string is a set of space-separated tokens. Given the proper title selection string any DVD disc can be opened, even disc with a structure protection that MakeMKV can't normally handle. This string describes what parts of DVD should be opened and in what order. Any title can be forced to be non-fake, titles can be split by cell (or chapter) boundaries, in any order.ĭuring opening DVD disc in manual mode one has to enter a "title selection string". Any part of the disc can be assigned to any title in any order. The good part is that in this mode user has precise control over DVD layout interpretation. The bad part about this mode is that its usage requires advanced knowledge about DVD authoring. Starting from version 1.9.0 MakeMKV can open a DVD disc in a so-called manual mode. Sometimes the produced result is different from a desired one - title can be wrongly identified as fake, title order could be wrong, series episodes could show up as a single gigantic title. During the DVD analysis phase MakeMKV has to make many decisions how to interpret contents of the disc - split video data to titles/chapters, remove duplicate title entries, detect and remove fake titles, skip portions of discs with mastering errors, etc.
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