Hi!
I recently watched "BBC History of World War II: Hiroshima" (http://www.amazon.com/BBC-History-World-War-Hiroshima/dp/B000F4RH8Y/ref=sr_1...). I found this movie in local library.
Special features includes two documentaries:
1) "A Tale of Two Cities" made by US Army and Navy. 2) Interview with US Air Forces personnel participated in bombings. (However origin is not clear, so I'm not sure that this is PD). 3) Also some parts of main feature are just US Air Force documentaries.
I think will be great to have such documentaries in Commons (Commons doesn't seem to have it).
I'm not specialist in DVD ripping and Ogg conversion, so any help will be appreciated. I believe that experienced person could made this job much faster and better then me.
Eugene.
PS
However, I'm not sure that movie restoration is not creating new copyrights.
Eugene- I'd suggest you stop by http://www.doom9.net/ . They are the primer source of information for this kind of thing. I think all their downloads are for windows, though many have linux/mac versions if you look for them. More importantly if you go to "The Basics" they've got plenty of tutorials and basic information on how to get started.
You might also try http://handbrake.fr/ which does ripping (but not protection cracking) for basically all platforms.
Basically all you really need to worry about is cracking/ripping the DVD. Once that is done you'll have raw video files you can manipulate with any run of the mill video editing software.
On Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 10:42, Eugene Zelenko eugene.zelenko@gmail.comwrote:
Hi!
I recently watched "BBC History of World War II: Hiroshima" ( http://www.amazon.com/BBC-History-World-War-Hiroshima/dp/B000F4RH8Y/ref=sr_1... ). I found this movie in local library.
Special features includes two documentaries:
- "A Tale of Two Cities" made by US Army and Navy.
- Interview with US Air Forces personnel participated in bombings.
(However origin is not clear, so I'm not sure that this is PD). 3) Also some parts of main feature are just US Air Force documentaries.
I think will be great to have such documentaries in Commons (Commons doesn't seem to have it).
I'm not specialist in DVD ripping and Ogg conversion, so any help will be appreciated. I believe that experienced person could made this job much faster and better then me.
Eugene.
PS
However, I'm not sure that movie restoration is not creating new copyrights.
Commons-l mailing list Commons-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/commons-l
Thank you, Jon!
I'll try to find some time to try.
Eugene.
On Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 11:02 AM, Jon Davis wiki@konsoletek.com wrote:
Eugene- I'd suggest you stop by http://www.doom9.net/ . They are the primer source of information for this kind of thing. I think all their downloads are for windows, though many have linux/mac versions if you look for them. More importantly if you go to "The Basics" they've got plenty of tutorials and basic information on how to get started.
You might also try http://handbrake.fr/ which does ripping (but not protection cracking) for basically all platforms.
Basically all you really need to worry about is cracking/ripping the DVD. Once that is done you'll have raw video files you can manipulate with any run of the mill video editing software.
On Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 10:42, Eugene Zelenko eugene.zelenko@gmail.com wrote:
Hi!
I recently watched "BBC History of World War II: Hiroshima"
(http://www.amazon.com/BBC-History-World-War-Hiroshima/dp/B000F4RH8Y/ref=sr_1...). I found this movie in local library.
Special features includes two documentaries:
- "A Tale of Two Cities" made by US Army and Navy.
- Interview with US Air Forces personnel participated in bombings.
(However origin is not clear, so I'm not sure that this is PD). 3) Also some parts of main feature are just US Air Force documentaries.
I think will be great to have such documentaries in Commons (Commons doesn't seem to have it).
I'm not specialist in DVD ripping and Ogg conversion, so any help will be appreciated. I believe that experienced person could made this job much faster and better then me.
Eugene.
PS
However, I'm not sure that movie restoration is not creating new copyrights.
Commons-l mailing list Commons-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/commons-l
-- Jon [[User:ShakataGaNai]] http://snowulf.com/ - Blog http://snowulf.imagekind.com/ - Pictures This has been a test of the emergency sig system.
Commons-l mailing list Commons-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/commons-l