The most recent Aiseesoft Total Media Converter Platinum I've got is from 3/11, with the main exe file showing v. 6.3.30.15386 -- it'll open Blu-Ray audio/video files [.m2ts] but it won't understand the Blu-Ray file layout, meaning you'll get a message that it couldn't open all the non-video files. I didn't already have a copy of Aiseesoft Media Converter Ultimate, which may just be their Converter Platinum renamed -- it does understand the Blu-Ray file layout, & that seems the main difference between the 2... the exe version is 6.3.58.15625 dated 4/11. As usual for Aiseesoft apps that can handle Blu-Ray, the hacked driver is added to XP, intended to let XP read Blu-Ray format discs -- in my experience it doesn't work, & it may or may not give you problems, I wish they wouldn't insist on adding it. Tested performance was only so-so, & as usual the ffmpeg ATI video assist, when enabled, slowed things down to unusable levels [tested using a 7870].
-----
A quick couple of notes to comments on the Aiseesoft Media Converter Ultimate GOTD download page...
The free BDlot DVD ISO Master Ashraf & Giovanni recommend is what it is -- a DVD copy app designed to bypass DRM. It may or may not handle the latest DRM, but if it manages the discs you want to backup, great, & if it doesn't you're not out any money. It only copies the files on a video DVD as an ISO [an image of your disc], which is a bit of a PITA, & it adds the Digiarty drive emulation driver, which you should be made aware of. Drivers like this are prone to cause problems, & really you should be given a choice to add it or not during installation, especially since you may already have something else installed that does the same thing [if any one drive emulation driver can cause problems, 2 of them at the same time is asking for it]. Maybe stretching quite a bit for a plus, the app does seem to work if you remove the driver once the app's installed.
Writing about BDlot DVD ISO Master, Ashraf said it's extremely slow, taking 90 minutes to copy a 2 hour video DVD. While there are several factors that can cause that, the Digiarty driver may well be the culprit -- it may be a great example of the problems these kind of drivers can cause. Copying a video DVD is just like copying files from a data DVD -- no more than that. DVD copy software's main, pretty much only task is figuring out the DRM & unlocking or bypassing it, & that's done up front, before the actual copying starts, so there's near 0 CPU usage etc. during the actual copy phase. Putting the copied files into an ISO image should only take a couple of minutes. The only *normal* slowdown is that many DVD drives have a sort of speed lock that limits the drive to 4X when a video DVD's inserted - Media Code Speed Edit can usually fix that, updating the drive's firmware - but even at 4X speed Ashraf's reported 90 minutes means something's surely wrong [it should take 1/3 that].
[Note that if you do want/need a disc drive emulation driver, the kind folks at both SlySoft & DVDFab provide them free -- and DVDFab's can be turned on/off [don't know about the SlySoft driver].]
To ISO or not ISO...
Ashraf in his BDlot DVD ISO Master review says he prefers DVDs as ISO files, & if that's what he likes, cool. Here's the flip side of the coin... Why have DVDs in a format that you have to mount to use? You can play, edit, convert, & burn DVDs just fine when they're in a VIDEO_TS folder as is normal, & likely do any of those tasks faster without the overhead from whatever drive emulator. To me it's kinda like pouring the coffee from the coffee pot into an uninsulated pitcher, then pouring it back into the pot every time I want to heat it up to have a cup. Why bother? If something will only work with an ISO image, you're using the wrong tool. And FWIW, there is no difference whatsoever between the files in a VIDEO_TS folder on your hard drive vs. inside an ISO image.