Every day we offer FREE licensed software you’d have to buy otherwise.
WonderFox DVD Video Converter 27.0 was available as a giveaway on September 3, 2022!
WonderFox DVD Video Converter is a top-rated full featured Video converter and DVD ripper, that provides the One-Step process to convert DVD, video and audio, as well as a Video Downloader helping to download 8K, 4K, 1080P, 720P video from 300+ sites.
WonderFox DVD Video Converter 1 Year Subscription. Only $19.95 instead of $34.95.
WonderFox DVD Video Converter Lifetime License. Only $24.95 instead of $39.95.
WonderFox DVD Video Converter Family Pack (5 PCs). Only $44.95 instead of $49.95.
Windows 7/ 8/ 8.1/ 10/ 11; Processor: > 1 GHz Intel or AMD CPU; Free Hard Disk Space: 50 MB or more; RAM: 512 MB or above; Language: English, German, Spanish, Japanese
91.8 MB
Lifetime
$59.95
I have purchased this and have been using it for years to rip my collection of dvd's to a NAS drive. Highly recommended.
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Excellent video conversion program. Very simple with excellent results. Well thank you.
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Karol, Format Factory is free all the time. It converts video and audio.
Have used it for years. It does far more than the offering today. Check it out !
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People prefer to pay for streaming services than to have fun with downloading Movies and to edit them for all kinds of smartphones or smart screens with or without colored subtitles. And burning DVDs is going downhill because the newer laptops and PCs no longer even have an optical drive. Not so long ago I was able to buy a Blu-ray player in a "thrift store" for € 35 that can also handle ordinary (burned) DVDs. Blu-ray also deteriorates famous because there is no more market for it. The successor to Blu-ray ...... never heard of anything again!
And nowadays there are smart screens those programs (Feuilletons, Movies) can store on an external SSD. Oh yes, DVD stores still exist?
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Is there a user of this software who could tell whether this software is also for 64-bit PCs, or not? No info on their homepage!
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krypteller, Thank you for your reply. I know that 32-bit software runs on 64-bit PCs. However, the latter are faster on 64-bit machines than the former software applications. I have a GAOD for 32-bit, but the differences between the former and this offer are irrelevant to me. And that’s why I asked the question.Thank you for your replay, after all.
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I picked this up in an earlier giveaway and liked it so much I up buying a full license. I've used it for downloading videos, ripping DVDs, and editing video and have been happy with it.
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Conversions are ok, and it converted a 1 hour 13 min 3.7GB webm video to a 3.9GB mp4 video in roughly 4 minutes with no noticeable quality changes.
But the edit options do not have any option to remove black bars that are around some videos, only change start/end points and add a filter over a video that you are most likely never going to want.
Some apps remove black bars automatically, some require you set some option, this app is really only a fast converter with no real edit functions. Fast conversion, that's it.
If you are looking for an app to edit and convert videos, this isn't what you want.
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Matt,
The only reason I'm aware of as to why some videos have/show black bars (either on the top and bottom of the screen or at the sides) is in order to keep/display the original aspect ratio that the video or film was shot in. For instance, video that was shot back in the 1990s or earlier had a 4:3 aspect ratio to fill the screen correctly of CRT (Cathode Ray Tube) type TVs before we had widescreen TVs, so to fit the image onto a modern widescreen TV screen requires black bars on either side of the screen to display the full image correctly.
The same situation applies to movies that were and/or are shot in a widescreen aspect ratio of 1.85 or 2.35 or 2.40 to one widescreen width. In order to fit the entire width of the movie image onto a modern standard 16:9 widescreen TV display requires having a black bar at the top and bottom of the screen.
Why would you want to zoom in on the video or film image to fill the entire screen (which would be the only way to remove the black bars) given that the result of doing so would remove/delete critical picture information that the director wished and intended for the viewer to see?
Drew.
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