毎日 通常購入しなくては使用できないソフトウエアを無料で提供します!
Leawo Blu-ray Creator 7.5.0< のgiveaway は 2016年9月8日
Blu-rayまたビデオを Blu-ray/DVDへコピーする他にビルトインの編集機能で特殊効果を加えたり 2D から 3D へ変換して 3D Blu-ray/DVD 映画を作成、ビルトインのメディアップレーヤーでビデオをプレーバックしたりスクリーンショットをスナッピングすることが可能。ディスクメニューをパーソナルイメージ、オーディオなどでパーソナル化でき、ビデオをBlu-ray/DVDに複製する他に、ビデオを効果を追加したり2D から 3D へ変換して 3D Blu-ray/DVD 映画を作成でき、ビルトインのプレーヤーでビデオをプレーバックしたりスクリーンショットのスナッピングなども可能。
機能:
お知らせ: 1年間のライセンス付き。 Leawo Blu-ray Creatorは Leawo Prof. Media suiteのもモジュールとして稼働。
Windows XP/ 7/ 8/ 8.1/ 10; Processor: 1GHz Intel or AMD CPU; RAM: 512MB RAM (1024MB or above recommended); Free Hard Disk: 5GB+ (DVD) / 25GB+ (Blu-ray Disc) hard disk space; Others: Recordable Blu-ray drive, Internet Connection
73.1 MB
$39.95
Leawo Prof. Media Blu-ray, DVD, HD ビデオ、オーディオと写真変換の全てが含まれたマルチ・ソリューションで、 HDビデオ変換、 DVD 複製、DVD コピー、 Blu-ray 作成、 Blu-ray 変換、 DVD コピー、Blu-ray コピー、写真スライドショー作成、写真スライドショーを DVD/Blu-ray へ複製、オンライン・ビデオダウンロードを提供。 特別30%割引コード: 0908_BD
Leawo Video Converter Ultimate はトータルビデオ変換スイートでビデオ、オーディオ、 DVD, Blu-ray とオンラインビデオ間での変換を実施。ビデオ変換、 Blu-ray 複製、Blu-ray 作成、 DVD 複製、 DVD変換、写真スライドショー作成と複製を提供。 特別30%割引コード: 0908_BD
Leawo Blu-ray Ripper DVDとBlu-rayコンテントを変換、 Blu-ray/DVD をビデオ、オーディオへ 変換。Blu-rayをAACS, BD+ 、そして最新 MKBで保護されたものも解除、 CSS-DVD へ変換。またソースのBlu-ray/DVDを編集したり3D映画を2D映画から作成も可能。 特別30%割引コード: 0908_BD
Blu-rayを Blu-ray/DVDへ縮小してコピーしたりハードドライブへBlu-rayのコンテントをコピー。パワフルなDVDへの変換ツールとしても利用でき、Blu-ray のコンテントを縮小して ファイルフォルダー、ISOイメージへ1対1の比率でコピー。 特別30%割引コード: 0908_BD
コメント Leawo Blu-ray Creator 7.5.0
Please add a comment explaining the reason behind your vote.
Leawo's one of few companies providing software to do more than convert the video on a Blu--ray disc to something else. Leawo Blu-ray Creator works, but there are caveats to creating your own Blu-ray video discs. I don't want to talk you out of getting Leawo's software today, but there are several factors to making Blu-ray video discs themselves that may be deal breakers for some people. I do think folks should go into it with eyes open, aware of the potential pitfalls to avoid wasting time & money.
You are not going to make something like the retail discs you buy or rent without spending thousands on software that creates the special Java code that they use -- instead you'll create discs that look & work like DVDs but at Blu-ray's higher resolutions. That means that there are no "more pro" apps to recommend.
Depending on your hardware, you *may* find some apps that are faster encoding 1080p AVC, but that's going to be iffy... I'm running a PC set up for video encoding with an i7 & a AMD graphics card with OpenCL, & after Much fiddling with the app's encoding settings, I can encode in Nero Plat. with *slightly* faster times than any other encoder I can find to try, but it's not a great user experience, & I think reviews calling Nero bloatware are justified. It also is more limited in the formats it'll import & use.
Blu-ray burners are more expensive -- ~$50+ vs. <$20 for a DVD burner -- & they may not last more than just over a year. The blank discs are more expensive -- the cheapest I've seen single layer are ~$15 for 50, while it's hard to find dual layer for less than $2 per disc. Blu-ray blanks are more fragile than DVDs, often with a soft vs. hard coating on the writing surface, & many brands will not last more than months before you start getting read errors. Both DVD & Blu-ray players can have compatibility issues with the brand of blank discs & the brand & model of burner that was used, but Blu-ray players are much worse in this respect. There's an AVCHD format that's almost identical to the official Blu-ray spec, many [most?] players will recognize discs you burn as AVCHD rather than Blu-ray, & not every player will play them. Note that for compatibility you *may* need to burn discs at slower speeds than the rated max.
That said, with video encoding there are 2 things that influence quality more than any other: the frame size & the amount of video compression. Other than BitTorrent, Blu-ray is the only way to relatively cheaply distribute 1080p video files that are 25-50GB -- the video bit rate is often ~30 vs. *maybe* 3-4 for streaming or cable TV. And while it's more of a niche thing, the Blu-ray spec does include DVD discs, so you can put AVC video on a cheap DVD blank, getting much better quality than DVD's mpg2, with a disc that's playable in many [most?] Blu-ray players.
Video encoding for Blu-ray **may** be an issue... The Blu-ray spec includes AVC [the most popular format by far], VC1 [think Windows Media], & mpg2. But as with DVDs, the details of the spec are secret -- you have to pay a bunch of money & sign a NDA -- so it's hard to know if your video will be in spec, & maybe near impossible to know if it will play on every player out there. I think most of the time you're fine, but I wouldn't invest a lot of time, or effort, or money without running a test or two to make sure a Blu-ray disc you burn will play where you want/need it to.
Encoding quality 1080p AVC video for Blu-ray is CPU intensive & takes a relatively long time -- on a PC with a i7 CPU you're doing well if you can manage 2 hours worth of video in somewhere around 2 hours, but mostly it'll take [sometimes much] longer than that. For that reason several apps use mpg2 for Blu-ray encoding. Encoding mpg2 takes much less horsepower, has much fewer calculations to make, and so is much faster, and with the space available on Blu-ray discs, you can use a high enough bit rate that the lower efficiency of mpg2 vs. AVC doesn't matter as much -- you *probably* won't see a difference. One downside is that some, usually lower powered devices, are no longer set up to decode mpg2 [though Blu--ray players are fine because of DVD compatibility], and without hardware assisted video decoding *may* have problems playing 1080p mpg2 at high bit rates.
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