


O Result can be played through xine, vlc, mplayer, Windows98SE (!) it's plain-vanilla DVD MPEG1 encoding. O DVD can be converted to a file tree or a burnable ISO9660 file, if that's what you want. O Shrinking factor can be 2-pass computed (best results) or a 1-pass adaptive guess-as-we-go compression method may be chosen (faster). O Onboard version of vamps and dvdauthor.

I could not get the newest versions to install because of dependency issues, but the link below has a method. The menu shortcut did not come up, but if I created a new shortcut launcher with just "k9copy" as the command, that works I could also edit the menu or original shortcut to only use k9copy. The k9copy v3.03 links below installed in my Linux Mint 19 after it removed the "libavcodec-ffmpeg-extra56" package, which I can re-install. There is a fork of K9Copy called "K9copy-reloaded" for Linux Mint 17.x, 18.x using their PPA or deb files, and Linux Mint 19.x users can use the deb file below. MakeMKV can also rip DVD/Blu-Ray discs into digital video ".mkv" files which can then be resized or burned to a DVD disc or easily converted to another video file format. If it is a video or movie, there are various techniques and application options for reducing their file sizes. If you run " inxi -Fxzd" from the console terminal prompt, highlight the results, copy and paste them back here, that should provide enough information. It would help to know more about your system setup.
