When I started this page in March 2000 I had no idea that it would turn into something big. When I started out ripping my first DVD there was no single good guide available on the web and I had to figure it out all on my own. I spent a lot of time browsing Delphi Forums trying to get details on how titles like "The Matrix", how to get proper synch, etc. In the end I decided to make the results available to everyone. Till then much has changed. This page now more than 300 HTML pages, more than 700 images and a considerable software archive and it's getting more and more. Moreover you can get your daily dose of ripping-related news. Keeping this all together takes an insane amount of time.
Therefore I'd appreciate it that if you find out something that this site does not cover if you contacted me and let me know so I can incorporate it into my site. Also.. if you've come across a problem that you've been able to solve on your own let me know in any case.. maybe I didn't know that particular problem before and it might be of interest to other people.
Furthermore I'd appreciate it that you note these basic rules: The guides are there as a whole and some guides are based on others. If you prefer somebody else's method that's fine with me but for instance my advanced guides may not be compatible with other site's basic methods. Therefore it's important that if you read a guide that goes beyond basic ripping that you're aware of the details of my basic guide - like how to use your favorite ripping program, encoder, what settings are required, etc. For instance if you want multiple audio tracks don't expect the guide on multiple audio tracks to explain you how to get these audio tracks... getting audio is described in the basic guides.
Also.. make sure you are aware of all the information available on this site regarding a certain subject before contacting me with a problem report. If there's something that I don't like at all it's replying to a question that has been dealt with in a guide or the FAQ. I know there's tons of information but I try to channel it in a useful way. The basic guides have links to all the information you may need... hence gain: it's important that you know the basics... and other guides may not cover all the information you may need.
And last but not least: Please tell everyone that may be interested in one of the subjects covered on this site about it. There's just one thing that counts for me: Your support. As long as people come to this site I'll continue to work on it.
About Doom9
First of all: Why the funny name? A long time ago (at least in the PC biz) ID Software released one of the world's most successful computer games: Doom. At that time I was still playing adventure games on my PC and I had no idea about 3d games. Only about 2 month later a friend of mine gave me Wolfenstein 3D to try out and I instantly fell in love with that type of games. When I had shot my way through the legions of enemies I read about Doom in a computer mag, and I even got a then special release of my favorite game mag which contained a title CD and had Doom on it. A week later I had finished the shareware version and was ready for the full release. After having beaten any mode except for Nightmare I got a couple of add-on CDs and I spent literally hundreds of hours playing Doom in one way or the other.
Then when I discovered the Internet, and more importantly, the IRC and it came to choosing a nickname the choice was clear for me. As Doom turned out to be my destiny as a gamer - I still played Star Wars games but not much else - it was the appropriate choice. The only thing was that Doom seemed a popular name so I often had to switch to Doom as "my" nick was already taken.
In September 98 I got my first DVD player and the first bunch of DVD discs (I bought 7 on one day..). Even before that I was looking forward to DVD when it was mentioned for the first time on a computer magazine. It was at the time when I started to get interested in English books and movies and would no longer accept the dubbed version and I spent a lot of money on English films. DVD allowed me to get my favorite films in English at cheaper prices then the imported VHS tapes. Furthermore all the extras on DVDs we love and the much better quality - and let's not forget not having to rewind anymore - was enough for me to instantly fall in love with the format and to buy a player at the official European launch date. At that time regionfree was not so common and so my first player only played R2 discs. Gradually I got annoyed to not be able to watch all the discs I wanted and so I got a regionfree player. Even before that I was watching R1 DVDs on my PC but the small screen simply killed the fun.
Being a regular on Oleg's site even at that date - mainly to get the latest software DVD player - I got interested in DVD ripping but all my tries to create a VCD out of a DVD failed miserably. I wasn't even able to encode more than one single frame off a DVD. In September 99 I read on inmatrix.com that the CSS scrambling had been cracked and that a program called Speed Ripper from DOD allowed you to copy DVDs to your harddrive. After searching the web for quite a while I finally found what I was looking for and along with it I had a respectable collection of VOB tools on my harddrive. The very first movie that made its way to my harddrive was Cruel Intentions that I just got a few days ago. But that was only the first step. I was still unable to make something useful out of these VOBs.
Only in December of the same year I discovered mpeg2avi and I managed to encode Enemy of the State into the DivX format. But I still didn't know about streamlists and so I got asynch video and nasty green frames at the cut positions and once again I gave up, even tough I had bought a larger harddisk to be able to rip since my previous 6GB disc was just too small.
But since that date I've been reading Oleg's forum almost daily in order to learn more and more and two months later I decided to give it a shot again. This time, equipped with FlaskMpeg 0.5 and Nicky Page's first guide I managed to convert The Mummy in one go with audio and the whole thing was synch. Then I tried The Matrix and I failed miserably again because of the multiangles. I also tried a lot of other movies in both FlaskMpeg and mpeg2avi - I had learned about streamlists in the meantime - and all NTSC movies would turn out asynch whereas all PAL movies done in FlaskMpeg would be choppy, or be asynch if I was doing the audio decoding with ac3dec. So once again I put my plans on hold and read Oleg's forum and I collected every bit of info on The Matrix and 2 weeks later I managed my first successful Matrix rip after having splitted the VOBs using vStrip.
In the meantime I felt ready to participate in the discussions on Oleg's forum since I had already learned quite a bit. As you can see.... I hesitated to post because I remembered the old Netiquette.. that is in a newsgroup you first wait and read for a while to learn the general tone and stuff. That's why I get so frustrated when people, instead of reading FAQs and follow discussions, simply post stuff that has been answered a 100 times over. In any case.. in order to be able to post I had to sign up at delphi.com and my favorite old-time nick Doom was taken. Delphi suggested a few others, among them Doom9. Assuming that it would be exotic enough I went for it.
After my success with The Matrix I encoded a bunch of other titles and I soon learned the basics about manual synching and stuff. Then I decided, that since the guides out there weren't really good and wouldn't deal with all the problems that I ran across during my first step, I would write a small guide on my own and publish it on the web. In order to have an easy address I opened a go.to account and used the same name for it: Doom9. That was the birth date of go.to/doom9 and my site, on the 15th of March this year. About a month later a friend of mine suggested that I should change my guides into the HTML format which I then did, and I started adding screenshots.
The rest you can reconstruct on your own by looking at the old news. The growth rate has been incredible and what was initially one 2 page word document is now a full fledged website with several mirrors and a rather professional design - at least I hope so.
My preferred encoding method
GordianKnot. Since v0.20 it's really easy to get very good results. If I were to make SVCDs I would use DVD2SVCD. For VCDs: TMPG (frameserving from DVD2AVI). As you can see.. DVD2AVI is in all these methods. Oh, and I don't rip as described in the guides, I use DVD Decrypter to rip all my DVDs.
My hardware
AMD Athlon XP 2200+
Abit AT7 legacy free Mainboard
512MB PC-2100 DDR RAM
Creative GeForce4 TI4200 GFX card
Western Digital WD1000BB-00CCB0 100GB Harddisc
Pioneer DVD-116 DVD-ROM
Pioneer A04 DVD-R/W
Plextor PX-W2401A burner (24/10/40x)
Why am I running this site?
Because it's fun. Initially it took me a couple of hours to set it all up and only when I started updating this place almost daily did the workload really become noticeable. Right now I spend about 1 hour every day min on this site. And if I had time I'd probably spend a lot more time testing out new stuff and trying if my ideas work out. Initially the idea was to share my experiences and to help other people that had the same matrix problem that I had. Now the motto is to be most up-to-date and trying to have the web's most comprehensive guides. It's really encouraging to see that you don't have to own millions, be a kick-ass designer or a genius to get something like this running. If I look at all the time many of my friends invest to create their personal sites which won't have more than 100 hits a year I think that my investment has paid off even bigger.
The growing popularity of this site has also brought me in contact with many program authors and I'm now in the comfortable position to actually be able to have a certain influence on the development of several programs and to bring in my ideas of how to make things better. This is even more gratifying.
I know that not everybody appreciates this site and some might say that this is just a nice facade for piracy. But I strongly disagree. It's up to each and every visitor of this site what they do with the information contained therein. Piracy would not be more or less of a problem if this site wasn't there, but many people might not be able to execute their right of fair use if sites like this did not exist.
So basically my motives are 2-fold: First I like to be able to put something big together and on the other side I like to help people to execute their rights which the movie industry would like to take away. I own more than 250 DVDs and I will continue to buy them but I will not sit back and watch as they try to strip the copyright act of its most important part - the fair use clause. Copyright should help benefit society and not the personal accounts of some movie studio execs.
This document was last updated on 09/25/02