Chaque jour, nous vous offrons des logiciels sous licence GRATUITS que vous devriez autrement payer!
L'offre gratuite du jour pour Leawo DVD Copy 2.1 était valable le 2 mars 2013!
Leawo DVD Copy peut facilement copier un DVD sur un ordinateur ou un disque dur sans perte de qualité. Il peut copier un disque DVD en dossier DVD ou en fichier image ISO, et prendre en charge la copie entre disques 1:1 sans perte de qualité, qu'ils soient protégés ou non. Ce logiciel de copie de DVD pour Windows vous permet également de copier un dossier DVD en fichier image ISO à des fins de sauvegarde.
Grâce à sa fonction de sauvegarde de DVD pratique et à son interface utilisateur simplifiée, Leawo DVD Copy offre la meilleure solution du marché pour la sauvegarde et la compression de DVD.
Remarque importante : pour activer le logiciel, il vous est demandé de vous enregistrer sur la page du fabricant (version complète, gratuite). Vous pourrez alors obtenir un code d'enregistrement avec lequel vous pourrez activer le programme.
Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8; 1 GHz or above Intel/AMD Processor; 512MB RAM (1024MB or above recommended); 5GB+ (DVD) / 25GB+ (Blu-ray Disc) hard disk space; NVIDIA GeForce GTX 260 and above; Recordable DVD drive, Internet Connection
31.3 MB
$29.95
Leawo Blu-ray Copy est le meilleur logiciel de reproduction vous permettant de sauvegarder les disques Blu-ray (BD25/BD50) et DVD (DVD-5/DVD-9) sur DVD ou disque dur. Il peut copier un Blu-ray/DVD en dossiers de fichiers, image ISO, disque de reproduction 1:1 et compresser les DVD BD50 en BD25 ou les DVD-9 en DVD-5 sans perte de qualité. Réduction de - 50 % pour les utilisateurs de GOTD : LDCG50
Leawo Total Media Converter Ultimate est une solution multimédia 7-en-1 parfaite permettant de convertir les fichiers audio communs/vidéo HD dans tous les formats vidéo, d'extraire et de graver des Blu-ray et DVD vidéo Il permet également de télécharger ingénieusement des vidéos en ligne, aussi bien pour le disque dur que des lecteurs portables différents. Réduction de - 50 % pour les utilisateurs de GOTD : LDCG50
Description du logiciel : Leawo Total Media Converter Ultimate est une solution multimédia 7-en-1 parfaite permettant de convertir les fichiers audio communs/vidéo HD dans tous les formats vidéo, d'extraire et de graver des Blu-ray et DVD vidéo Il permet également de télécharger ingénieusement des vidéos en ligne, aussi bien pour le disque dur que des lecteurs portables différents. Réduction de - 50 % pour les utilisateurs de GOTD : LDCG50
Leawo iTransfer est une application tout-en-un de transfert de données entre l'ensemble des périphériques iOS, itunes, votre ordinateur et les appareils non-iOS. Ce programme offre trois façons de sélectionner les fichiers sources pour le transfert. Il vous aide à transférer les fichiers sans restriction afin de vous permettre de partager facilement et gratuitement des fichiers sur des périphériques différents Réduction de - 50 % pour les utilisateurs de GOTD : LDCG50
Pretty decent software if you have ancient PC working with a single CPU and old DVD to rip, since it doesn't support GPU acceleration and cannot bypass the last DRM protections.
Other than that I can't see any reason to use this (poor) program!!
THUMBS DOWN!!
BEST FREE ALTERNATIVES
* DVDFab HD Decrypter
This GEM is an amazing FREE all-in-one DVD copying & burning software, which can remove almost all DVD protections of a whatsoever DVD & Bluray Disk and then copy your DVD/Blu-ray video to the HD of your machine at very high speed. It can copy either full disc or main movie, enabling you to specify your preferred output audio track and subtitle, as well as change your DVD playback order.
http://www.dvdfab.com/hd-decrypter.htm
* Wonderfox DVD Ripper (==> Softpedia Giveaway: key should still work)
Very powerful DVD ripper tool designed to rip the content of (encrypted) DVDs to the most popular video formats and portable media devices out there (iPad, iPod, iPhone, Apple TV, Android based mobile phones and Pads, the popular BlackBerry models, Nokia mobile, PSP, PS3, XBOX and Wii). It can remove CSS protected DVDs, Sony ArccOS DVDs and all region 1-6 DVDs, as well as the latest copy protections through continous updates.
http://www.softpedia.com/get/CD-DVD-Tools/CD-DVD-Rip-Other-Tools/WonderFox-DVD-Ripper.shtml
* DVDSmith Movie Backup
Excellent FREE and very easy to use DVD copier and DVD backup software, which can decrypt and remove all kinds of DVD protections (CSS, RC, RCE, APS, UOPs, etc...).
Then you can copy your ripped DVD to the HD of your PC as DVD folder, keeping almost the same audio and video quality as the one featured on the original commercial DVD.
http://www.dvdsmith.com/dvdsmith-movie-backup.html
* WinX DVD Ripper
Great free app which can rip any copy protected DVDs (removes DVD CSS, UOP, RCE, region code and even Sony ARccOS) and then convert them to MP4, WMV, AVI, FLV, MOV, MPEG, H.264, iPhone, iPod, Apple TV, Android phone, PSP, etc.
It also lets you preview the DVD, select the subtitle language and even set the starting and ending time should you be eager to trim the video.
http://www.winxdvd.com/dvd-ripper
* GiliSoft DVD Ripper Free
Very good FREE app designed to rip videos or audio streams from DVDs to various video formats such as AVI, WMV, MPEG, DivX, MP4, H.264/MPEG-4 AVC, MOV, RM, XviD, and 3GP.
It also enables you to extract audio from DVD video, merge & cut videos, crop the video frame, as well as add image effects, watermarks and subtitles to your ripped DVD videos.
http://www.gilisoft.com/product-dvd-ripper-free.htm
* Free DVD Copy Decrypter
Handy and reliable utility designed to remove copy protection from DVDs, thus allowing you to copy them on your hard drive.
http://www.bluraytoavi.com/dvd-decrypter.html
My 0.000000000000000000000000000000000000000000001 cents for today's giveaway!!
Pros
*Supports DVD discs, folders, and ISOs as input
*Allows users to output DVDs to discs, folders, and ISOs
*Bypasses DRM protection
*Supports DVD-5 and DVD-9 DVDs
*Can copy whole DVDs, only the main movie, or specific chapters/titles as defined by you
Cons
*Is very slow
*Developer lists “CSS copy protection” as the only type of DRM that can be bypassed. While the developer does not explicitly state this, my guess is Leawo DVD Copy cannot bypass more advanced/newer DRM protection. For what it is worth, the program was able to copy my DRM-protected DVD (my DVD has CSS DRM).
*Is unable to convert DVDs to other video formats
Free Alternatives
DVDFab HD Decrypter
DVDSmith
Final Verdict
Click here for final verdict and full review
#4: "DVDShrink … always free, no registration required, smaller download and system footprint, no demands on what graphic card is required unlike today’s offering."
'Shrink is a great app, but it won't do anything about or with DRM. It's also a bit older -- Nero Recode up to version 10 is or does the same thing, adds some nice options, & may work better in win7/8... never saw definite confirmation but it was said the guy behind Shrink went to work for Nero & that's when DVD Shrink stopped being developed. [Recode versions 11 & 12 are still cool IMHO, but seem to be moving away from any Shrink legacy towards being more an all around video converter.]
For those that haven't tried it, Shrink [& Recode] can make the files on a DVD smaller by discarding some of the data in the original -- very basically the same idea as converting files from a music CD to MP3 -- but without completely re-encoding. That process was mainly useful back when dual layer DVD blanks [& the drives to burn them] were expensive -- nowadays you can just use something like Leawo DVD Copy to make a backup of the DVDs you've bought onto a dual layer disc without the bother.
That said, Shrink can still perform a few useful tricks... If you're encoding video that you've recorded with your camera or from a TV show etc. to put on a video DVD, one of the hassles is choosing a bit rate for the mpg2 video so that it'll fill the disc but still fit on the disc [the higher the bit rate the bigger the file the better the quality]. You can overshoot just a little bit, intentionally or not, & then use Shrink to quickly reduce the size so it fits on a DVD blank using all the available space. Shrink is also good for trimming the beginning &/or end of DVD video -- if you're one of those people who put the DVDs they buy on their hard drive(s) to watch with something like Media Center, you might be surprised by how much file space the end credits take up. And if you're putting the video on your cell or tablet but don't have or want to use a Ripper, Shrink can copy the several VOB files on the DVD into a single VOB file that most video converters will accept.
* * *
#6: "and it helps me to copy my DVD disc(CSS DRM) to another disc so that i can send it to my friends, i have been wondering how to do this for a longtime"
And you might also spend a long time wondering why you did it as you're awaiting the court's judgement. Some places you can make backup copies of video DVDs you've bought, you *may* be able to convert that video to another format for something like your cell or tablet, in the US I think you can record broadcast TV & share it with members of your immediate family, but in a great many countries giving or selling any of that video can land you in court if not jail.
* * *
#14: "Pretty decent software if you have ancient PC working with a single CPU and old DVD to rip, since it doesn’t support GPU acceleration and cannot bypass the last DRM protections. "
Sorry -- with all due respect etc., *Copying* a DVD disc doesn't involve much CPU, & doesn't require any GPU assist... All you're doing is copying files from one place to another, same as if you were copying the GOTD download from your Download folder to somewhere else. If the process takes longer than it should the *usual* reasons are you've got the app set to convert [re-encode] the video or your DVD drive has a sort of DRM built in, limiting it's speed when it detects a video DVD -- check out MediaCodeSpeedEdit if you want that to go away. Of course converting or transcoding the video is another matter entirely. You can use a Ripper to start with, which is a copy app & converter combined, but if you prefer another app to do the converting, or don't need to convert the video in the 1st place, that's where DVD [& Blu-Ray] copiers come in.
The Leawo DVD Copy features list does say it'll "Compress and copy DVD-9 to DVD-5", but I don't know why you'd want to -- if you want something on your hard drive that takes up less space, convert the video to AVC/H.264 which creates much, Much smaller files yet unlike the mpg2 that DVDs use can keep most all the original quality -- if you're backing up a DVD you bought & either the main movie won't fit on a single layer disc or you want a full copy, shell out the $0.50 - $1 for a dual layer DVD blank.
Working with the latest DRM OTOH is something to be concerned about. Companies like those behind AnyDVD & DVDFab constantly check out new releases & modify their code accordingly, have been around quite a while, but their apps can be a bit expensive. Companies like Leawo, WinX etc. would like some of that market -- don't know if they'll always work as well or even maintain the effort a year or two from now, but if you're willing to take that risk maybe you can save a fair bit of money. DVDFab does have their always free DVD HD Decrypter, but if you read the accompanying notes, it at best lags a few months behind their paid software when it comes to new DRM, & may not ever handle everything. Lots of people wait until older DVDs go on sale before they buy anyway, so that can work well enough. Free IS great, but in this case unless it's a PR move like DVD HD Decrypter &/or a company's trying to build market share with a GOTD offer, I have to wonder who is going to spend the cash for every new release for every region [DRM can vary by region] to test if their app handles its DRM.
"Compress and copy DVD-9 to DVD-5 with lossless quality"
Compress a dual layer DVD to a single layer with no loss of quality?
That is impossible.
DVDShrink ... always free, no registration required, smaller download and system footprint, no demands on what graphic card is required unlike today's offering.
@dipoun — mars 2nd, 2013, 1:39
"Pourquoi les commentaires mettent-ils tant de temps à être en ligne ?"...
C' est une vieille histoire & cela vient de l' époque où une bande d' "énergumènes" francophones ont... (il n' y a pas d' autre terme) "foutu le bordel" sur ce site (FR).
Oui, on peut voter sans avoir tester. A mon avis, "GAOTD" pourrait empêcher cela MAIS ça n' améliorait pas (à mon avis) la pertinence du vote.
Bye bye.
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Quand on voit à 9 h 02 qu'il y a déjà un nombre relativement important d'évaluations, on a la réponse à ta question...
Quant aux commentaires, ils paraissaient beaucoup trop tard. Certains n'étaient jamais publiés. Je m'en suis rendu compte avec les miens, jamais incorrects.
Il me semble que ça s'améliore de ce côté-là. Le dialogue devrait en être amélioré.
Tu noteras que tu attendais une réponse de la part de GOTD. Je ne suis pas un modérateur du site, mais un simple utilisateur comme toi. Je t'ai répondu parce que je trouve ton observation juste et pertinente.
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Salut à tous, je me posais cette question : est-ce que tous les internautes ayant voté ont téléchargé et essayé le logiciel...? Apparemment, il est possible de voter sans le faire. Je viens de le faire (dans un sens positif, mais cela aurait pu être inversé). Le sondage de GAOTD est-il donc objectif et donc légitime ? Et je réitère une intervention ultérieure (laissée toujours sans réponse) : pourquoi les commentaires mettent-ils tant de temps à être en ligne ? Cela dessert le dialogue, l'échange, l'évaluation (qui sont des éléments essentiels). Le nombre de modérateurs est-il insuffisant ? Dans l'attente d'une réponse de la part de http://fr.giveawayoftheday.com/
Amicalement dipoun pour INTELLECT TERRITORIAL
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