this post was submitted on 25 Nov 2024
-4 points (35.7% liked)
Physical Media
41 readers
9 users here now
Welcome to Physical Media!
This is the spot for anyone who loves collecting and talking about physical media. From DVDs and Blu-rays to VHS tapes, game discs, vinyl records, and even old-school cassettes—if it’s something you can hold in your hands and enjoy, it belongs here.
Show off your collection, share your favorite finds, or just join in on conversations about why physical media still matters. Whether it’s for the artwork, the nostalgia, or just the love of owning something real, we’re here to celebrate it all.
Let’s keep the love for physical media going!
founded 1 week ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Haven't actually done this with Flatpak, but I know it can be a pain.
I see flathub lists an makemkv add-on for VLC - is that installed? I'm not sure what codecs the VLC flatpak even includes or if it suffers from the same licensing restrictions.
So...
I got the DVD to rip in MakeMKV on my old computer running Mint. I cannot get MakeMKV to work as a decoder for VLC on that machine; there's no documentation that walks you through how to do that, everyone in their forums talks in links to other threads, I'm going to assume that flatpak CAN'T work because flatpak. It does recognize discs on that machine though and can rip them. That makemkv addon flatpak shows up in Fedora's software manager but not on Mint's. It seems to do nothing.
On my Fedora machine, neither MakeMKV nor Handbrake seem to function at all. Neither of those applications seem to be able to interact with the disc drive in any way. VLC can play ordinary DVDs, so the drive is functioning and talking to the OS. MakeMKV either seems to work normally if you launch it without the optical drive attached or with it empty of discs, the second you put a disc in it spools a thread up and then just hangs forever. DVD drive isn't doing anything. Doesn't matter if it's a DVD or a blu-ray. Handbrake just doesn't do anything, there's nothing you can do to select the optical drive as a source. Just sits there with it's tongue in its ass waiting for a round of applause.
Neither app is available from Fedora's repos as a .rpm. Nothing ever is. Neither app offers instructions for compiling on Fedora. Nothing ever does. If you try to follow the compile instructions for Debian substituting apt-get install for dnf install, inevitably the packages it wants aren't in the repos. Because nothing ever is. I'm distro hopping tomorrow.