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cavelamb himself June 24th 07 01:55 AM

Best computer hardware aboard boat!
 
And it really really works!

http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavelamb/c18-deck.htm

Terry K June 27th 07 12:53 AM

Best computer hardware aboard boat!
 
On Jun 23, 9:55 pm, cavelamb himself wrote:
And it really really works!

http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavelamb/c18-deck.htm



Thenk ewe.

This is undoubtedly the best use for computer hardware on a sailboat.
There truly must be some logic in the multiverse, somewhere, proved by
the fact that it works. For how long?

Mi kawmpliments.

-An aspiring snob.

Terry K






Bill June 27th 07 06:56 PM

Best computer hardware aboard boat!
 
On Jun 26, 4:53 pm, Terry K wrote:
On Jun 23, 9:55 pm, cavelamb himself wrote:

And it really really works!


http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavelamb/c18-deck.htm


Thenk ewe.

This is undoubtedly the best use for computer hardware on a sailboat.
There truly must be some logic in the multiverse, somewhere, proved by
the fact that it works. For how long?

Mi kawmpliments.

-An aspiring snob.

Terry K


I have seen buildings put cd's in trees and it keeps the birds away
for a really long time. I haven't heard of them coming back as long
as the disc is there in fact. It just needs to be able to move a
little in the breeze or motion of the boat.


cavelamb himself[_2_] July 26th 07 06:10 AM

Best computer hardware aboard boat!
 
cavelamb himself wrote:

And it really really works!

http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavelamb/c18-deck.htm


Wow!
I noticed several boats in my marina sporting these this evening.

And it really really works!

cavelamb himself[_4_] November 8th 07 05:42 AM

Best computer hardware aboard boat!
 
A question for someone who knows...

I have a whole bunch of DVD movies I'd like to have aboard the boat.
But for the space needed to store them (3 bookshelves right now).

What would be involved in archiving some of these on a USB type
hard drive.

How do you get tehm on the drive? Special software to read the
disks? Or "play" them on?

Richard

Drew Dalgleish November 8th 07 06:19 AM

Best computer hardware aboard boat!
 
On Wed, 07 Nov 2007 23:42:37 -0600, cavelamb himself
wrote:

A question for someone who knows...

I have a whole bunch of DVD movies I'd like to have aboard the boat.
But for the space needed to store them (3 bookshelves right now).

What would be involved in archiving some of these on a USB type
hard drive.

How do you get tehm on the drive? Special software to read the
disks? Or "play" them on?

Richard


could you just throw away the cases and stack them on a spindle?

cavelamb himself[_4_] November 8th 07 07:27 AM

Best computer hardware aboard boat!
 
Drew Dalgleish wrote:
On Wed, 07 Nov 2007 23:42:37 -0600, cavelamb himself
wrote:


A question for someone who knows...

I have a whole bunch of DVD movies I'd like to have aboard the boat.
But for the space needed to store them (3 bookshelves right now).

What would be involved in archiving some of these on a USB type
hard drive.

How do you get tehm on the drive? Special software to read the
disks? Or "play" them on?

Richard



could you just throw away the cases and stack them on a spindle?



CDs are ok stored that way, but DVDs tend to be too fragile.

Alex November 9th 07 01:29 AM

Best computer hardware aboard boat!
 

"cavelamb himself" wrote in message
...
Drew Dalgleish wrote:
On Wed, 07 Nov 2007 23:42:37 -0600, cavelamb himself
wrote:


A question for someone who knows...

I have a whole bunch of DVD movies I'd like to have aboard the boat.
But for the space needed to store them (3 bookshelves right now).

What would be involved in archiving some of these on a USB type
hard drive.

How do you get tehm on the drive? Special software to read the
disks? Or "play" them on?

Richard



could you just throw away the cases and stack them on a spindle?



CDs are ok stored that way, but DVDs tend to be too fragile.


Why not put the DVDs in Tyvek or soft plastic sleeves? Google "DVD storage
sleeves" and you'll find many suppliers, at about a nickel per. If you want
the protection of hard plastic, there are "jewel box" type cases that are
very thin, especially those that store two per case.



cavelamb himself[_4_] November 9th 07 01:53 AM

Best computer hardware aboard boat!
 
Alex wrote:

"cavelamb himself" wrote in message
...

Drew Dalgleish wrote:

On Wed, 07 Nov 2007 23:42:37 -0600, cavelamb himself
wrote:



A question for someone who knows...

I have a whole bunch of DVD movies I'd like to have aboard the boat.
But for the space needed to store them (3 bookshelves right now).

What would be involved in archiving some of these on a USB type
hard drive.

How do you get tehm on the drive? Special software to read the
disks? Or "play" them on?

Richard


could you just throw away the cases and stack them on a spindle?



CDs are ok stored that way, but DVDs tend to be too fragile.



Why not put the DVDs in Tyvek or soft plastic sleeves? Google "DVD storage
sleeves" and you'll find many suppliers, at about a nickel per. If you want
the protection of hard plastic, there are "jewel box" type cases that are
very thin, especially those that store two per case.



It's a space issue.

I have a little over 1000 movies stored exactly that way (Thin cases).
It was a mad house when it was all VHS tapes!

DVD is a lot better - storage space wise - but still takes up
considerable physical space.

DVD's are made differently (than CDs) and really need to be better
protected than just sleeves or stacked on a spindle.
Besides, I don't want to take the disks themselves out on the boat.


I checked at Fry's today.
750 Gig USB drive for just under $300.
That would hold about 100 movies.
(guessing an average of 7 Gig or so per title?)

But how to load them is the question...


Alex November 9th 07 03:26 AM

Best computer hardware aboard boat!
 
"cavelamb himself" wrote in message
...
Alex wrote:

"cavelamb himself" wrote in message
...
Drew Dalgleish wrote:
I have a whole bunch of DVD movies I'd like to have aboard the boat.
But for the space needed to store them (3 bookshelves right now).
What would be involved in archiving some of these on a USB type
hard drive.
How do you get tehm on the drive? Special software to read the
disks? Or "play" them on?
could you just throw away the cases and stack them on a spindle?
CDs are ok stored that way, but DVDs tend to be too fragile.

Why not put the DVDs in Tyvek or soft plastic sleeves? Google "DVD
storage sleeves" and you'll find many suppliers, at about a nickel per.
If you want the protection of hard plastic, there are "jewel box" type
cases that are very thin, especially those that store two per case.

It's a space issue.
I have a little over 1000 movies stored exactly that way (Thin cases).
It was a mad house when it was all VHS tapes!
DVD is a lot better - storage space wise - but still takes up considerable
physical space.
DVD's are made differently (than CDs) and really need to be better
protected than just sleeves or stacked on a spindle.
Besides, I don't want to take the disks themselves out on the boat.
I checked at Fry's today.
750 Gig USB drive for just under $300.
That would hold about 100 movies.
(guessing an average of 7 Gig or so per title?)
But how to load them is the question...


If you are willing to sacrifice a little playback quality, why not rip your
DVDs to MPEGs or other file formats which produce much smaller files?
E.g. http://www.wikihow.com/Rip-a-DVD-to-...ile-Using-DVDx
A two-hour movie will be about 750 megs. So your external drive could hold
about 1,000 films. Stack up a few of those and you'd have quite a library!
(g)





VideoVic46 November 11th 07 04:15 PM

Best computer hardware aboard boat!
 
Each DVD is 4.7 GB, but audio and video are separate mpg files, and usually
highly segmented (not continous) and encrypted.

The alternatives are to:

1. Use a commercial rip solution ($49-$89) to copy the disk image to your
HDD. You can then play each, just as though it were a physical dvd off you
HDD. A few DVDs are encrypted using sophisticated schemes which will prevent
you from doing this. Put these in large CD binders by topic or genre and
carry them aboard, or

2. Invest 5-6 hrs for each to actually rip the separate mpg audio and video
files, re-edit the highly segmented files using video editing software, and
re-render them to your Goliath HDD or blank DVD discs;

3. Simply record each in real time from a dvd player through an inexpensive
($130) time-base-corrector to eliminate the jitter and skew caused by the
anti-copy protection into a dvd recorder ($100-$4500 depending on quality),
then transfer those files to your HDD;

4. Buy copies of your collection on eBay, and put them in binders to leave
aboard; or

5. Get a biggger boat that has space to store your eye candy. You will enjoy
this alterntive the most, if you get a fully gymballed popcorn popper.

V-

"Alex" wrote in message
...
"cavelamb himself" wrote in message
...
Alex wrote:

"cavelamb himself" wrote in message
...
Drew Dalgleish wrote:
I have a whole bunch of DVD movies I'd like to have aboard the boat.
But for the space needed to store them (3 bookshelves right now).
What would be involved in archiving some of these on a USB type
hard drive.
How do you get tehm on the drive? Special software to read the
disks? Or "play" them on?
could you just throw away the cases and stack them on a spindle?
CDs are ok stored that way, but DVDs tend to be too fragile.
Why not put the DVDs in Tyvek or soft plastic sleeves? Google "DVD
storage sleeves" and you'll find many suppliers, at about a nickel per.
If you want the protection of hard plastic, there are "jewel box" type
cases that are very thin, especially those that store two per case.

It's a space issue.
I have a little over 1000 movies stored exactly that way (Thin cases).
It was a mad house when it was all VHS tapes!
DVD is a lot better - storage space wise - but still takes up
considerable physical space.
DVD's are made differently (than CDs) and really need to be better
protected than just sleeves or stacked on a spindle.
Besides, I don't want to take the disks themselves out on the boat.
I checked at Fry's today.
750 Gig USB drive for just under $300.
That would hold about 100 movies.
(guessing an average of 7 Gig or so per title?)
But how to load them is the question...


If you are willing to sacrifice a little playback quality, why not rip
your DVDs to MPEGs or other file formats which produce much smaller files?
E.g. http://www.wikihow.com/Rip-a-DVD-to-...ile-Using-DVDx
A two-hour movie will be about 750 megs. So your external drive could hold
about 1,000 films. Stack up a few of those and you'd have quite a library!
(g)








the Unbeliever November 27th 07 05:13 PM

Best computer hardware aboard boat!
 
Or... you could use a program that recognises the vob file format used
on the DVD's. Then you simply copy the files to your hard drive. Since
the industry started out in opposition of any open source software for
DVD's, the Linux folks had to write all their own stuff right from the
start. You might want to look at sourceforge.net for software that has
been ported to windows. VLC does a lot more than what I use it for and
I seem to recall reading that it does this also, but if it doesn't
there will be other software that does.

regards,
Joe

"VideoVic46" wrote in
et:

Each DVD is 4.7 GB, but audio and video are separate mpg files, and
usually highly segmented (not continous) and encrypted.

The alternatives are to:

1. Use a commercial rip solution ($49-$89) to copy the disk image
to your HDD. You can then play each, just as though it were a
physical dvd off you HDD. A few DVDs are encrypted using
sophisticated schemes which will prevent you from doing this. Put
these in large CD binders by topic or genre and carry them aboard,
or

2. Invest 5-6 hrs for each to actually rip the separate mpg audio
and video files, re-edit the highly segmented files using video
editing software, and re-render them to your Goliath HDD or blank
DVD discs;

3. Simply record each in real time from a dvd player through an
inexpensive ($130) time-base-corrector to eliminate the jitter and
skew caused by the anti-copy protection into a dvd recorder
($100-$4500 depending on quality), then transfer those files to
your HDD;

4. Buy copies of your collection on eBay, and put them in binders
to leave aboard; or

5. Get a biggger boat that has space to store your eye candy. You
will enjoy this alterntive the most, if you get a fully gymballed
popcorn popper.



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