iOrgSoft DVD to iTunes Converter Review: Features, Pros & Cons


What iOrgSoft DVD to iTunes Converter does

iOrgSoft DVD to iTunes Converter:

  • Converts DVD video into iTunes-compatible formats (typically MP4 and M4V).
  • Extracts main movie or selected chapters.
  • Offers basic editing (trim, crop, add subtitles) and batch conversion.
  • Preserves audio tracks and subtitle streams when available.
  • Provides presets for Apple devices (iPhone, iPad, Apple TV) to simplify output choices.

When to use this tool

Use iOrgSoft DVD to iTunes Converter when:

  • You own DVDs and want digital copies for personal use on iTunes-enabled devices.
  • You need a simple, device-focused workflow with presets for Apple devices.
  • You want lightweight editing features without learning complex transcoding tools.

Avoid if you need:

  • Advanced encoding control (detailed bitrate, two-pass x264, CRF tuning).
  • Open-source or free solutions — there are capable free tools (HandBrake, MakeMKV) that may be preferable to advanced users.

Preparing to rip: requirements and setup

Before starting:

  • Ensure you own the DVD and are legally allowed to make a personal backup in your jurisdiction.
  • Install iOrgSoft DVD to iTunes Converter and any required DVD-reading drivers (some discs require Third-party DVD decryption libraries).
  • Make sure you have sufficient disk space: a single DVD rip can require 1–8 GB depending on quality and length.
  • Connect a stable power source for laptops and close other heavy applications to avoid slowdowns.

Step-by-step ripping guide

  1. Insert the DVD into your computer’s DVD drive and launch iOrgSoft DVD to iTunes Converter.
  2. Click “Load DVD” (or similar) to import the disc. The software will scan and list titles (main movie and extras).
  3. Select the main movie title or choose specific chapters you want to rip.
  4. Choose an output format. For iTunes compatibility pick MP4 (H.264) or M4V. If your device has presets, select the appropriate Apple preset (iPhone, iPad, Apple TV).
  5. Adjust video settings if needed:
    • Resolution: keep original resolution for best quality (usually 720×480 for commercial DVDs in NTSC or 720×576 for PAL). For viewing on modern devices, you may upscale to 1280×720, but that won’t add detail.
    • Bitrate: 1,500–2,500 kbps is reasonable for good visual quality on most devices; increase for better fidelity.
    • Frame rate: retain the source frame rate (usually 23.976, 25, or 29.97 fps).
  6. Choose audio track and subtitles. Select main audio (usually AC3 or DTS on DVDs) and pick a subtitle stream or burn subtitles into the video if desired.
  7. Optionally use editing features: trim unwanted parts, crop black bars, or add a watermark.
  8. Set an output folder and file name.
  9. Click “Convert” (or “Start”) to begin ripping. Monitor progress; conversion times depend on CPU speed and chosen settings.
  10. When finished, import the resulting file into iTunes: open iTunes (or Finder on macOS with Music app), choose File > Add to Library, and select the ripped MP4/M4V.

  • Container: MP4 or M4V
  • Video codec: H.264 (x264)
  • Resolution: keep original DVD resolution (480p) or upscale to 720p if desired
  • Bitrate: 1500–2500 kbps (raise to 3000–4000 kbps for high-detail scenes)
  • Audio: AAC 128–192 kbps (or keep original AC3 if you prefer passthrough)
  • Subtitles: soft subtitles if supported (keeps them toggleable), otherwise hardcode if device requires it

Troubleshooting common issues

  • DVD not loading: make sure the drive reads other discs; test with another DVD to determine hardware vs. disc encryption issues. Some commercial DVDs use CSS or other protections that require additional decryption support.
  • No sound after rip: check audio track selection and whether the player supports AC3 passthrough; converting audio to AAC usually solves playback issues in iTunes.
  • Out-of-sync audio/video: try ripping with default settings or test different frame rate options; post-rip sync tools may help if problem persists.
  • Subtitles missing: ensure you selected a subtitle stream or burn them into video; some players won’t display external subtitle files automatically.

Copyright laws vary. In many countries, ripping copy-protected DVDs may be illegal even for personal use. Make sure you are familiar with local laws and only rip discs you own and are permitted to back up.


Alternatives to iOrgSoft

Tool Pros Cons
HandBrake Free, open-source, powerful presets No built-in decryption for copy-protected DVDs (requires MakeMKV or libdvdcss)
MakeMKV Excellent for lossless rips to MKV, preserves all tracks MKV may require rewrapping/encoding for iTunes; larger files
DVDFab Comprehensive features, decrypts many DVDs Commercial software, can be expensive
Any Video Converter User-friendly, device presets Quantity/quality of advanced options varies

Final notes

Ripping DVDs to iTunes-friendly files with iOrgSoft DVD to iTunes Converter is straightforward: choose the main title, pick MP4/M4V with H.264, set reasonable bitrate, select audio/subtitles, convert, then add to iTunes. For best results retain source resolution and use AAC audio if you want wide compatibility. If you need advanced encoding control or free tools, consider HandBrake + MakeMKV as alternatives.

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