How to "backup" HD DVD movies with your Xbox 360 and a PC
Sometimes it's hard to draw the line between "fair use" and "just plain ol' dumb," but if being in charge of the playback and storage of your purchased media is of the utmost importance to you -- to the tune of a couple grand -- then Jake Ludington over at MediBlab has a solution for you. His argument in favor such extreme measures is the tried and true "backup" excuse, since, so far, managed copy hasn't made its way into his discs or hardware. Of course, with the amount of money involved in his method, he would probably be better off just paying buying a few extra copies of any disc he might purchase, and storing 'em in a vault someplace. However, if you would like to follow in Jake's fair usin' footsteps, the method is really quite straightforward. Just score yourself an Xbox 360 and HD DVD drive (one of the view HD DVD solutions which will output 1080i or 720p via component), a minimum of 4 eSATA drives in a RAID 0 array (for which you might need an external SATA card), an AJA XENA LG analog HD capture card (which will be doing most of the heavy lifting in this process), and a speedy PC for processing the video once you've got it all captured. Not quite 1080p, and not quite digital perfection, but it should win you a good bit of love and recognition in the BitTorrent community be plenty good for most "backup" purposes.
[Via eHomeUpgrade]
[Via eHomeUpgrade]























Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
moksha @ Dec 4th 2006 6:17PM
I don't think the Bittorrent community would really care, since no one would want to download the high definition videos over standard def.
Phenix 05 @ Dec 4th 2006 7:42PM
what????
that didn't make any sense!
tons of people have HD displays for their comps me included and some HD content for that would be fine and dandy for me!
30 dollars is a lot to spend for a movie.
J.J. Mancini @ Dec 4th 2006 8:32PM
moksha,
Your not very smart. It seems you have never looked. Because just go to www.bit-hdtv.com and see a huge community with just hdtv torrents.
pats @ Dec 4th 2006 11:07PM
It's articles like these which are gonna cause studios to enable ICT. Then new movies will output at only at 960x540 over component, and my Xbox 360 HD-DVD player will be useless. :-(
Dave @ Dec 5th 2006 3:18AM
Wait wait wait!
Did the xBox drive just killed HD DVD?
Look at this Universal!
The under-priced players and the high piracy will bring HD DVD format to its grave!
zsyco @ Dec 5th 2006 4:38AM
Take a look at this article: http://ps3.ign.com/articles/748/748723p1.html
If anyone wants to say that the 360 killed HD DVD, then the PS3 commited a murder suicide with itself and Blu Ray. Keep in mind, you can put whatever HDD you want in a PS3 and they allow you to easily mod the OS so it's much easier than the simple steps to copy from the 360 to a PC.
Jonathan Abbey @ Dec 5th 2006 5:07PM
If anyone wants to say that the 360 killed HD DVD, then the PS3 commited a murder suicide with itself and Blu Ray. Keep in mind, you can put whatever HDD you want in a PS3 and they allow you to easily mod the OS so it's much easier than the simple steps to copy from the 360 to a PC.
Not so. All ripping a Blu-Ray disc gets you is a very well encrypted set of video files, not something you can actually, you know, play, or do anything else useful with. You can't burn it to another Blu-Ray disc, because encrypted Blu-Ray video material requires markers in the lead-in material that home Blu-Ray burners can't produce. You certainly can't play it on your screen, because there is no equivalent to DeCSS for Blu-Ray yet, and it's not clear if there ever will be.
The whole Blu-Ray Ripped On PS3 story is much ado about absolutely nothing.
Lufusol @ Dec 12th 2006 9:42AM
"Wait wait wait!
Did the xBox drive just killed HD DVD?
Look at this Universal!
The under-priced players and the high piracy will bring HD DVD format to its grave!"
Au contraire, Dave! "Under-priced" players aside, piracy = easy adoption. I'm not encouraging piracy, though historically piracy has greased the rails for the adoption of new technology/formats.
I don't think any CURRENT factors are going to make or break either HD DVD or BR. Over the course of the next year (2007) people will vote with their wallets. I predict only the obvious, which is that the more convincing advertising campaign will determine the winner and not which one uses the "best" technology. Sadly.
Xena Fan @ Dec 22nd 2006 2:15PM
One correction -- it is a Xena LH card Jake is using, which is a very nice card indeed. http://www.aja.com/html/products_windows_xena_LHe.html
hackbit @ Jan 6th 2007 2:22AM
theres already a tool to decrypt hd dvds called "BackupHDDVD"
jj @ Feb 10th 2007 12:31AM
One small problem... The capture card you list here accepts component inputs only, not RGB. The VGA cable on the XBOX 360 outputs RGB only, afaik.
Marcis Gasuns @ Aug 29th 2007 12:37PM
Sounds greeat
Marcis Gasuns @ Aug 29th 2007 12:38PM
Thanks for the article