I just started setting up a Jellyfin server and am moving all of my old DVD backups off of an ancient NAS that doesn't play well with modern TVs or Chromecast. Can't cast half the videos anymore because crhomecast says F you to certain audio and video formats, but jellyfin has zero trouble talking to my TV. It was going so well that I thought I might try to back up some of the aging DVD/BluRays we have laying around because they don't last forever and I'd hate to lose these titles. I used to use Handbrake/AnyDVD, but it seems AnyDVD is defunct these days... What are people using to back up their personal DVD collections these days? I prefer Windows apps, but I do have a good linux system that I can use to back them up with too, it's just slower than my Win PC.
Assuming you mean commercial DVDs, handbrake+libdvdcss.
It's pretty much 'insert disk, hit button, wait some amount of time, video file!'
Would recommend, however, that you do not use AMF (AMD) for encoding, and just stick to QSV/NVENC/x264/x256 because AMD's quality is uh, less than stellar and you probably want the best possible quality for archiving your DVDs.
If you are going to worry about archival then when reencode it at all? Just remux the content from the dvd into a suitable container and be done with it.
And, if you have the disk space, not an unreasonable one, but for me? DVD quality is pretty bad compared to anything newer and I've never noticed any real degredation transcoding a mpeg-2 stream to x265 which is like 25% the filesize, but that's very ymmv.
Not sure what I did incorrectly, but that was the route I started on before looking for other ways to backup my collection... I dropped the libdvdcss in my Handbrake directory as was suggested on other sites, but Handbrake throws an error every time.
I guess I could have included that. It's just a generic muti-error output stating it couldn't find any files or that the source may be copyright protected - something I figured libdvdcss was supposed to work around.
It's still a quality-at-a-given-bitrate deficient.
If you're doing temporary encoding for like, streaming, or something where real-time encoding performance matters it's still probably the way to go, but if you're wanting to create high-quality archival stuff it's still not quite as good as your other options.
Granted, x265 on the cpu is probably still the way to go (excepting maybe if you're doing AV1 on an ARC gpu), but nvenc and qsv still outclass AMF.
Wish AMD would get a little more serious and bring that up to par, but they seem to be waffling on what they even want to do for consumer gpus so I'm not really holding my breath here.