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WinX DVD Copy Pro 3.9.3 Giveaway
$59.95
EXPIRED

Giveaway of the day — WinX DVD Copy Pro 3.9.3

A solid DVD backup software featuring 9 DVD backup modes.
$59.95 EXPIRED
User rating: 62 26 comments

WinX DVD Copy Pro 3.9.3 was available as a giveaway on July 28, 2020!

Today Giveaway of the Day
$36.00
free today
Download music from 1000+ sites anytime and anywhere!

A DVD copier is very useful if you want to make identical copies of your favorite DVDs because you can’t trust DVD for long-term preservation. In particular, if you damage some limited-edition DVDs, it is impossible to buy again from Amazon and Walmart. You need a backup to protect your important DVD collection. For DVD backup, it is common to burn a blank DVD disc or save it as an ISO image on a high capacity HDD.

WinX DVD Copy Pro allows you to copy DVD to DVD disc, store DVD on your computer hard drive, and burn ISO/DVD folder to blank DVDs. There can be no video compression involved in the DVD backup process. In this way, all the DVD information such as the menu, DVD titles, subtitle tracks, audio tracks can be fully retained.

You can use WinX DVD Copy Pro for breaking the restrictions in discs as well. WinX DVD Copy Pro can decrypt the contents of any protected DVD in order to read and copy the data. Usually, the DVD has a region lock or CSS locks in place which makes sure that any user cannot copy the content from the source. Thanks to WinX DVD Copy Pro, you can bypass these restrictions with no hassle.

What's new in V3.9.3?

  • Supports newly-released DVD in 2019 and 2020.
  • Reinforced recognized technology to read I/O to determine the DVD reading speed and whether to skip bad sectors.
  • Fixed: Scanning looping continuously on some DVDs.

Bonus Offer: WinX provides a unique chance for GOTD users to get Lifetime Full License of WinX DVD Ripper Platinum at 56% off discount (only $29.95 instead of $67.95).The best mate for DVD Copy Pro with comprehensive features. Valid only for 48 hours.

System Requirements:

Windows Vista/ 7/ 8/ 10 (x32/x64); 1GHz Intel/AMD processor or above; 256MB RAM (512MB or above recommended); 100MB space for installation

Publisher:

Digiarty Software

Homepage:

https://www.winxdvd.com/dvd-copy-pro/

File Size:

18 MB

Licence details:

Lifetime

Price:

$59.95

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Comments on WinX DVD Copy Pro 3.9.3

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Please add a comment explaining the reason behind your vote.
#1

Dear All,

Preserving physical DVD discs means space issues and a risk of being damaged and scratched, why not copy your DVD on external hard drive as your ‘viewing’ disc and keep the original safely on the shelf? WinX DVD Copy is the best DVD copy tool that can copy any DVD to blank DVD disc or ISO, MPEG2 that can be stored on hard drive or computer.

To get the licensed copy for free, please:
1. Download this program from GOTD. Then unzip and install it.
2. Go to Digiarty giveaway page:https://www.winxdvd.com/resource/top-3-free-dvd-copy.htm
3. Tap "Get License Code" button, you can easily see license code.

If failed to unzip and install the file from GOTD, you can also re-download the setup file from Digiarty official website. To activate the full functions of this program, you need to activate giveaway license before Aug 10. The giveaway version does not support free upgrade.

Combo Giveaway!
Need WinX DVD Ripper Platinum version to remove DRM & DVD encryption to rip/digitize/backup/play DVD, go ahead to get free license of DVD ripper Platinum

Feel free to contact support@winxdvd.com, if you have any problems on this program and giveaway.

Sincerely,
Digiarty Support Team
Official Website: https://www.winxdvd.com/

Reply   |   Comment by Digiarty Support Team  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+12)
#10

WinX DVD Copy pro Pro does not work in my Windows 10 Home 64 bit, because it pinches with the Windows burning program. But WinX DVD Copy Pro works great in my Windows 8.1. 64 Bit

Reply   |   Comment by Manfred  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-3)
#9

Thanks but I stopped using DVD's ages ago just like Outlook

Reply   |   Comment by Peter van Rijswijk  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-1)

In response to [ Peter van Rijswijk ], who no longer uses DVDs ...

... me too, except to copy forward, considering the endless and rare supply of DVDs from our libraries, and used sellers, plus the occasional discovery, so to speak, in someone's inherited collection of personal effects.

And Netflix has DVD-only movies ... that cannot be played in DVD players, so copying is the only way to see what we paid for.

If you never see a DVD again and are happy, great.

I know I'm going to see one a week or so for the rest of my life.
.

Reply   |   Comment by Peter Blaise  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#8

As released here at GAOTD years ago, I tried this and after using for a while, I purchased it for each of my machines. Product is GREAT. Does all it claims. Good support. I tried other WinX by Digitary. All are great.

Reply   |   Comment by Morgan Pierce  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+1)
#7

Thought I would post my experience with the installation of both (Ripper & Copy) My webroot stopped installation of the copy program indicating it con tainted a trojan. This was after a complete and successful installation of the ripper given away free today. So I decided to take the advice below of JohnL below and downloaded the trial version. After installation, I inserted the license code from the giveaway info and it became the licensed version immediately. I now have both programs successfully installed on my Win10 Pro. After losing all my info on a WD usb disc drive, I have decided to copy my current info onto a disc and this software today will allow me to do it. Thank you giveaway and mostly thanks to Digiarty software.

Reply   |   Comment by mardel  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+3)

In response to [ mardel ],

Disk = magnetic, such as hard drive or even magnetic diskette

Disc = single platter stand-alone removable read by LED/laser-light, such as CD, DVD, Blue Ray, and so on, even old video discs

WD Western Digital makes disks, not discs.

Just cleaning up our jargon here.

Thanks for exploring and sharing.
.

Reply   |   Comment by Peter Blaise  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+1)
#6

I have WinX DVD Ripper Platinum. Does WinX DVD Copy Pro do anything more than that? Ie, I've not used Platinum to clone a DVD (burn it to a blank DVD), but I assume it can do that as well? Thanks.

Reply   |   Comment by Mark  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+8)

In response to [ Mark ], asking if the is better or different from WinXDVD Ripper.

Date of issue is all.

It depends on the date, a newer version of either program may read disks that the older version of either program can't read.

This may make an unencrypted copy of an encrypted disc that the older ripper can't even read.

Yeah, that may beg fir us to do a 2-step process, ( 1 ) copy the disk, ( 2 ) rip the copy.

Has anyone copied to RW Re-Writable disks that we we can then rip, and then use over and over for the next copy-rip cycle?
.

Reply   |   Comment by Peter Blaise  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#5

The HELP file does NOT open,
Converting a DVD to MP4 is impossible.
DVD's can only be converted to MPG, which turns out to be 6 times larger than MP4

The above NEEDS to change, if you want clients coming back
Thanks

Reply   |   Comment by Adrian  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+5)

Adrian, The Giveaway version does not copy to MP4, the platinum version does @56% of today.

Reply   |   Comment by zac  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+5)

Adrian, I had no problem opening the help file on either program. You have to realize that the help opens to the website wherein you can go directly to the user guide for each of today's programs.

Reply   |   Comment by mardel  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+5)

"Converting a DVD to MP4 is impossible.
DVD's can only be converted to MPG, which turns out to be 6 times larger than MP4"


DVDs are entirely mpg2 video. Like most any other video type or format, mpg2 can be re-encoded to most other video formats, e.g. AVC/H.264, H.265 etc. Doing so of course you'll lose the DVD's menus, and subs if want to re-use them need to be OCRed to .srt text files. The "MPG" format -- Not mpg2 -- is rarely used nowadays AFAIK. The quality of AVC video [& H.265 etc.] varies depending on settings like the bit rate used when (re)encoding, which also usually effects the size of the video file. IMHO an AVC bit rate of 1.5 - 2 will get you close to the original DVD video quality, shrinking an mpg2 video file from around 5 GB to around 2 GB -- a substantial saving, but not 6X.

Reply   |   Comment by mike  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+10)

In response to [ Adrian ], who noted that ripping and conversion are not included.

Correct, this is a copier, and at most, a re-container-er-ish.

They also offer a separate ripper/converter program at a special discount, and often have the ripper/converter here as a giveaway.

Yes, it would be nice if programmers integrated all their features into one program, even if we added those features iteratively ... but look at Leawo ( who ? ), can anyone tolerate their unmanageable shoebox program collection interface?
.

Reply   |   Comment by Peter Blaise  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#4

Have used this for while; it does the job quite respectfully. This is becoming a rare breed of softwares now, as DVDs are becoming obsolete. The first perfect one was DVD shrink 3.2, and most of the current softwares are polished versions of the same, suitable for modern OSs. This is an opportunity for me to update my current version, thanks GOTD.

Reply   |   Comment by Neo  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+5)

While I agree that DVDs may be obsolete, they still sell more DVD discs than Blu-ray. Shrink [& earlier versions of Nero Recode] can drop some of the in-between frames to give a smaller file size with no *apparent* quality loss [generally as long as the % was in the 90s]. Digiarty apps [and everything else besides Shrink & Recode] re-encode the video, meaning there's always quality loss. Neither Shrink nor Recode work with DVDs that have DRM, so you need something like today's GOTD, WinX DVD Copy Pro, to get the DVD on your hard drive to use with Shrink/Recode, if that's what you want to do.

Reply   |   Comment by mike  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+8)

mike, I still use a version of shrink 3.2 that decrypts DRM

Reply   |   Comment by J  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#3

Downloaded and installed effortlessly as Digiarty products always do.....Windows 10 64 bit...I-7 processor 16GB DDR4 ram..Omen Obelisk desktop.

Reply   |   Comment by Gilbert  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-2)
#2

When I downloaded it Chrome wasn't happy, saying it couldn't be downloaded securely. This usually means the final link was http not https. So to be safe I ran the trial installer from WinX, to see if I could just input the key from the readme.txt in the download. Turns out it didn't need a key and felt the 3.9.1 key (previous Giveaway) was okay to carry on with.

Thanks for the Giveaway! (Although I use it for non-protected n on-commercial DVDs it's still very handy.)

Reply   |   Comment by JohnL  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+7)

JohnL, use it for what - what do folks do with this?

That is, after running this program on a DVD, what do you have after that?

Thanks.

Reply   |   Comment by Peter Blaise  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-11)

Peter Blaise, I used to make a lot of my own DVDs (from my videos) and I can turn them back into a video file again. (The source files are usually quite a mess, and on the backups of a dead computer, it was a while back.) You can make copies of DVDs you own, copyright allowing, or copy the contents onto your computer. Also if you damage a DVD, but not fatally, you could make a copy before it dies.

Reply   |   Comment by JohnL  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+4)

"That is, after running this program on a DVD, what do you have after that?"

You have a copy of the DVD [complete or just the main title (e.g. movie)] on your hard drive without the original DRM. It can then be stored & played that way, e.g. a Huge number of people put their DVD collection on their hard drives & used Win7 Media Center to play them. With the Android version of VLC, media boxes, phones, & tablets can play them too. Or you can burn to a blank disc to backup your DVDs. Many people do convert the video to a more efficient format, e.g. H.264 or H.265, but since Blu-ray the quality of DVD video has declined, so I can't recommend re-encoding because the quality loss is too noticeable.

Reply   |   Comment by mike  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+10)

To [ JohnL ], who copies something from DVDs to hard drives.

If I am understanding correctly, this program can:
- copy a DVD to a blank DVD,
- copy a DVD to a hard drive as an ISO file to be read as if it were a DVD, or reburned to a DVD,
- copy a DVD's group of files to a group of files on a hard drive
- and overcomes current encryption locks that try to prevent copying

This program does not:
- rip
- convert
- make smaller copies,
... hence they offer a discount on their ripper/converter
( note, ripping/converting may lose menus and subtitle toggles ).

Have I got it?

Thanks for exploring this and sharing.
.

Reply   |   Comment by Peter Blaise  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)

To [ mike ], who seems to understand way more about digital movie files ... more than Digiarty WinXDVD marketeers can succinctly communicate,

If I am understanding correctly, this program can:
- copy a DVD to a blank DVD,
- copy a DVD to a hard drive as an ISO file to be read as if it were a DVD, or reburned to a DVD,
- copy a DVD's group of files to a group of files on a hard drive to be read by media players,
- and overcomes current encryption locks that try to prevent copying.

This program does not:
- rip
- convert
- make smaller copies,
... hence they offer a discount on their ripper/converter program for folks who want more, um, less,
( note, ripping/converting may lose menus and subtitle toggles ).

Have I got it?

I appreciate that typical ripping/conversion program routines may produce dimunation of perceptible qualities, creating copies that may be experienced as comparatively softer, blurry, having artifacts, compressed dynamics, jittery, loss of detail, muddy sound, and so on.

"Qualities" wise, I personally just want subtitles, and 480 lines - and, importantly, minimum disk space use - I know I'm watching a fiction, so even JPG-like compression artifacts and waves across blue skies and other supposedly solid colors don't really bother me, for me, they are like noticing the paper grain in a book I am reading ( remember paper books ? ), I can ignore paper grain, or study it, my choice, but essentially unrelated to the text content.

And, "qualities" wise, I really do not want to inspect the pores on some Hollywood star closeup, I find that to be distracting, though others may find that to be the only reason for watching, but for me, it as if resolving the fiber texture of the paper in a printed book somehow enhances the value of the text content - I'd rather the storage on a Blu-ray disk be used for 25 to 50 movie presentations per Blu-ray disc, not dedicate so much storage for on-screen detail that I am not interest in for the overwhelming majority of my viewing.

Maybe it's analogous to mixing down The Beatles music for the listeners of monophonic AM radio low fi car dashboard speakers, versus Hi-Fi FFRR stereo or multi-channel ( Quad ! ) studio sources and monitors.

If the goal is small copies, a ripper/converter program makes sense.

If the goal is a copy at all, especially bypassing the interruptive behavior of encryption, a copier, re-container-er program such as this will do.

Am I getting it?

Thanks for exploring this and sharing.
.

Reply   |   Comment by Peter Blaise  –  3 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
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