09.03.2020
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Recently, forum is witnessing a continuing demand for a Mac version of free studio. Despite there has been some rumors about developing a free studio for Mac edition in next year, it seems that nothing has been done by its developer DVDVideoSoft. As for people who want to download free studio on Mac platforms like MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, iMac, etc, they will turn to a great similar program instead. And this guide is for those who are looking for an alternative that is packed with more features like download, record, edit and that Free Studio may not have. About Free Studio Free Studio is an all-in-one video toolkit bundling multiple converters into one handy program, with YouTube downloading and video converting features most renowned among users. It gets rid of spyware or adware, enabling you to freely download YouTube videos and convert videos to MP4, AVI, WMV, FLV, Apple iPhone, iPad, Android, etc with a few simple clicks. But as its official website claims, Free Studio is only available for Windows/Vista/XP.

In other words, you may be in a great dilemma in case of putting videos on Mac with Free Studio. So finding an alternative that works on Mac OS X is indispensible. Best Free Studio for Mac Replacement No matter what your multimedia demands are, demonstrates itself to be a solid alternative to DVDVideoSoft Free Studio for Mac version. It is an all-in-one video converter, YouTube downloader, screen recorder, slideshow maker and video editor, which satisfies all your multimedia needs and assists you to enjoy videos on macOS Mojave without any hassle. Whether you are going to convert MPEG, MOV, AVI, MP4, WMV, AVI, FLV or transfer 1080p MKV, MTS, AVCHD videos, the free studio software for Mac makes it happen a few seconds with high quality. Below is the detailed operations of the free studio for Mac to download and convert video on Mac computer.

Hit the 'YouTube' button at the top. Find the video you'd like to download. As soon as you click 'paste & analyze' button, the DVDVideoSoft Free Studio Mac alternative software will automatically detect the YouTube video opened in browse.

Or you can simply copy the target YouTube video address, paste it to the address bar and click 'analyze' to load the YouTube video details in the software. Hit 'Download Now' to start the YouTube download. Tips: This video converter for Mac also supports without compromise speed and quality. Other Issues with Free Studio As a matter of fact, people seeking for a replacement of free studio are not merely out of Mac incompatibility but also due to other issues with Free Studio as below many users complain.

Apple Dvd Studio Pro V1.5 (for Mac) Xyzzy

Most programs in Free Studio are simplistic but are not bundled into one interface under the hood. Free Studio has a few issues with iPhone video converter. To be specific, the videos converted to iPhone output format with this program cannot be recognized by iPhone series. Based upon the abovementioned errors in Free Studio, finding an alternative is a must have. And meets all your needs, not only being the best Free Studio for Mac alternative, but also handling all the issues that Free Studio encounter. Author: Updated on Dec.

Apple dvd studio pro v1.5 (for mac) xyz 3

Originally posted by kuyu let me clarify. I wish to backup my own collection of dvd's which I bought fair and square. My intention is to be able to stream the converted mp4 across my network, but i'm not quite sure qt pro is the solution for me. I already know how to stream with VLC, but my conversion software is soooo slow.DISCLAIMER. Stealing anybody's hard work is wrong, and I by NO means meant to imply or condone that such activity was my intention. Which reminds me, how long until we have an iMovie video store? Click to expand.Ohh, that wasn't a attack on you or your ethics/morals.

Apple Dvd Studio Pro V1.5 (for Mac) Xyz 3

Since vob is a digitally encoded/encrypted format, decoding it (even for fair-use reasons) is illegal. Just pointing that out (also pointing out the corruption of our rights by the DMCA) The only way programs like X Copy and so on are legally sold in stores is due to the fact the copy process never circumvents the digital encryption but is a bit-by-bit copy (well, that's how they present it to the courts the MPAA has challenged them in. ) Still pointing out, ripping vob is illegal for ANY reason. Hence, Apple would not allow QT Pro such a task. Your best bet is to look for illegal products (not condoning the action, just pointing out it is illegal in the US just by being able to do such a thing).

You can create DVDs, you just can't rip DVDs from studio DVDs, whether you own them or not. It's part of the main principle of the DMCA. You can't circumvent or break digitial encoding. DVDs from studios are all encoded through the vob process, so when you rip to mp2, mp4, or mpv, you are breaking the law. Techinically, there is an encryption key (if you're in the pro market, you buy the right to an encryption key to encode your created DVDs in the exact same way) that is being defeated. It may not be 'just', but that's the way it is in the current legal system.

QT pro will not allow you to do something illegal (if it could, the MPAA would have been up-in-arms about it.). I just realized I should follow up my statements with this. You can record DVDs for your own use if you own the DVD under the 'fair-use' act to VCRs fed off of the DVD analog signal or DVD burners that take the analog signal and convert it back to digital.

The reason why is that you are allowing the DVD player to export an analog signal and therefore operating within the normal operations of a DVD player (and thereby, not circumventing or breaking the digital encoding. This is the same principle behind the legality of iTunes bought songs exported to CD and then brought back in as mp3s. If you had a program that did this without exporting out and then retrieving it back, it'd be illegal since once again you're circumventing digital encoding encryption by doing a direct conversion) Isn't the legal world fun!!! Click to expand.at last, this might the answer to what i have been looking for: so if i buy qt-pro and also the mpeg2-plugin i should be able to convert the vob to something the imovie can import.right? I am looking to edit a couple of movies to delete some scenes that i find objectionable; then, i will be able to watch the re-authored movie with my kids without qualms. Am interested to hear opinions if this is technically feasible. Note - i own the original, store-bought DVDs, so please don't bother about the nuances of legality here; i am interested only in the 'how', not the 'why'.

Originally posted by radhak at last, this might the answer to what i have been looking for: so if i buy qt-pro and also the mpeg2-plugin i should be able to convert the vob to something the imovie can import.right? I am looking to edit a couple of movies to delete some scenes that i find objectionable; then, i will be able to watch the re-authored movie with my kids without qualms. Am interested to hear opinions if this is technically feasible.

Note - i own the original, store-bought DVDs, so please don't bother about the nuances of legality here; i am interested only in the 'how', not the 'why'. Click to expand.Okay, there may be a problem - if you want to use iMovie to edit the movies, you better get ready to use tons of HD space. IMovie only imports DV Streams or Quicktime movies with DV codec. That means, a 2 hour long movie will consume about 26 GB of diskspace. Technically, you are totally right: Quicktime Pro, the MPEG2 plugin and you can open DVD files.

Those are to be exported to DV format. Just choose 'DV-Stream' in export options. Then it may take some really long time (realtime, or even longer to convert, chances are good it takes a few hours). Afterwards, you can import the file into iMovie. Use Quicktime Pro to split the movie into segments of no longer than 9 minutes and 20 seconds each!

Because stupid iMovie does not open files which are larger than 2 GB. Then you can use iDVD (if the movie is under 90 minutes, that is ) to export the movie to a censored, clean DVD-R I hope everything is correct and said now. Editing commercial DVDs Thanks Stike, that gives me a perspective, particularly about the disk-space and time/effort involved. My thought was, if i am able to identify the exact.vob file that i want to edit, and as each vob file is around 1 GB or less, i could do this - import specific xyz.vob - delete certain scenes - export back to 'xyz.vob' - now combine with the rest of the.vob files from the original DVD (ripped of course), and burn. This would mean i avoid importing the whole movie, saving time and hassle.