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Reviews

DVD to Pocket PC
No-brainer tool rips almost any DVD to your PPC

While there are several tutorials on using freely available software to make Pocket PC-sized movies from DVDs, none are as easy to use or as reliable as Makayama Software's DVD to Pocket PC ($24.95). In the short time it has been available, DVD to Pocket PC has built a semi-rabid following of very happy customers. Best of all, it appears to be legal to use, since the extreme compression derived from the video stream coming into the licensed copy of Windows Media Player falls within the bounds of fair use, or at least that's the way I read the law. If you started uploading these onto the net, though, things get questionable in a hurry, so use this software only to create low-res copies of DVDs you own and use them for your own personal use. Doing otherwise puts you right into the crosshairs of Ashcroft's goon squad. End of sermon.

Now that we have that little bit of unpleasantness behind us, let's look at the process this software uses to create movies for the four-inch screen. First, you insert your DVD into your Windows PC's drive, begin playback, then stop. You've now unlocked the media for legit playback on this computer. Next, launch DVD to Pocket PC and click on Open. This will show you the media files on the disk. Choose the longest one (it's the actual movie you want), then choose either Normal or Best encoding. Normal will fit most 2 hour movies onto a 128MB memory card, while Best requires a 256MB card. Try both to find your viewability threshold. Either way, don't expect to use your computer for three to six hours, as it's a two-pass process that's best run overnight.

I found the results to be completely satisfying for casual viewing, but I definitely would not want to watch a major new release in this format. With the incredible depth of great non-fiction, documentary titles coming out at reasonable prices, the best long-term use of these low-res files is catching up on all the ălittleä movies on your list. Another great use is to carry items captured by your Tivo that you've burned to DVD-RW. (See my Replay column elsewhere in this issue for details on an inexpensive DVD recorder that makes this easily, and legally, possible.)

Watching movies on a handheld has become something of a running joke around our editorial office. The butt of the jest is the ultra-nerd who just can't tear himself away from his idiot box long enough to have a life, so he takes it everywhere in his pocket. My response is that people like to make pocket movies for two reasons: because it's cool, and because they can. There is something edgy about it, like you are beta testing the future of media delivery. Of course, someday soon pocket-sized movies will look a lot better than these heavily compressed renditions; hi-def originals, smarter codecs, faster devices, denser displays, and multi-gigabyte flash media will make it happen in a couple of years. Until then, kick back in your favorite chair in the dentist's waiting room, jack a pair of noise blocking in-earphones, and try to ignore the other patients' stares. They don't think you're cool, they think you're nuts. But you and I know better ÷ in a few years, everyone will be doing it. Can you say MoviPod?

-Edison Carter

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