Tuesday, December 04, 2007

I'm Becoming a Zune Fanboy

Well, thats not saying much since I've never given into the temptation to get any mp3 player, but this latest round of deep discounting on the first generation brown zunes got me interested. My son actually decided to take his birthday money and bought one off of buy.com for $90. OK the price is cool enough right there, but wait theres more. Microsoft enabled the first generation players to be updated so they have the version 2 software (yay). The install took FOREVER! But it eventually did install and everything is working great, all except for the fact that I tried (in vain) to get the zune to synch with the kids windows 2000 box. Well, ok, that thing is old as the hills, I know, so I'm not TOO upset about that one...

Now we have ripped a bunch of cds, subscribed to some pod casts and even dipped our toes in the zune market place. But here's the real bummer, the Zune software has no way to transfer movies onto itself and there really isn't anything worth watching in the market place. I searched around for some solutions and there are a bunch of programs that claim to transfer DVDs to the Zune. In fact there seems to be a blog dedicated to this pursuit www.zunevideoconverters.com.
But they all seem to cost anywhere from $40 to $60

Lucky for me, my friend Jill (a fellow buy.com sale zune owner) found a free alternative on one of the zune chat boards. She found a post that said to use DVDdecrypter to rip the DVD VOB files onto your hard drive and then use a piece of software called SUPER (Simplified Universal Player Encoder & Renderer) to convert the movie file into a format that the Zune can use. Being in a festive holiday mood, I tried it with our copy of Charlie Brown Christmas on DVD. I eventually got it to work, but SUPER is anything but simplified. They should replace the 'S' with a 'C' for 'COMPLEX'. SUPER offers so many options and so details that it might be a bit daunting to the average person. But me being a geek, I was determined to figure this out. Unfortunately the option to go directly from VOB to Zune format failed every way that I tried (I even tried it on a brand new Sony Vaio just to be sure). I ended up getting it to work by selecting the VOB to MP4 option. I did it at 320x240 resolution and 25 frames per second. It converted a 1 gigabyte VOB file into a 150 mb MPG file, so you could fit quite a few hours on the Zune! One thing I didn't figure out was how to make the two VOB files that make up the 1 hour special into one single MP4 file. I'm sure there's a way, but it wasn't overly apparent to me.

Anyway, I thought this would be helpful to fellow Zunies.

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