

Everyone that's used it sees no difference in quality. I mostly have Plex for my family and friends to use and the only person who may notice a difference in quality is my dad. I also have over 1300 movies, 300 albums and several full seasons of dvd/bluray rips so I have quite a bit more. I don't see the need for the full rip other than to say you can do it. I certainly see better quality through Plex, with my setup, than I do with streaming services.

(Haven't upgraded to 4K yet.still running my 9 year old 1080p projector) Both are hard wired, neither have issues with Direct Play on full Blu-ray rips. Just amazing the difference watching a 1080p "stream" and then switching to a 1080p full rip Blu-ray.even on something as mundane as "That 70's show"įYI, I have a home built server running on an i5-3470 with Linux and my clients 2015 Nvidia Shield TV (in theater room) and FireTV Firestick Lite in the living room.
Anymp4 blu ray ripper subtitles for free#
I do watch some free services on that screen, but for free I'll deal with lower quality. (Normally takes about 1.5-2 years to add an additional 8TB).Īs for streaming services, no.I don't pay for any streaming services. It has taken me 4 years to fill up that much so I'm not worried about adding more space. I'm only using about 16TB of my 24TB available at the moment. Out of my ~950 movies about 300 are 1:1 full Blu-ray rips. What is the point of Plex if I have to pull out the disc to watch the full quality. Please go to the relevant subreddits and support forums, for example: Build help and build shares posts go in their respective megathreads No referral / affiliate links, personal voting / campaigning / funding, or selling posts Welcome to /r/Plex, a subreddit dedicated to Plex, the media server/client solution for enjoying your media! Plex Community Discord Rules Latest Regular Threads: No Stupid Q&A: Tool Tuesday: Build Help: Share Your Build: Submit Troubleshooting Post Files not showing up correctly?
