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Features of DVD to iPod Video Converter 1.0      
Written by yanglu   
September 28, 2008 14:18

Fully optimized for dual core, Hyper-thread processor. The first software and the only software available on the market that supports dual 100% CPU usage in high quality DVD video conversion. If you have an iPod nano (second generation) you have a music playback of around 24 hours. You can view pictures with music for around 5 hours. If you have an iPod nano (first generation) you have a music playback of around 14 hours. You can view pictures with music for around 4 hours. If you have an iPod shuffle you have a music playback of around 12 hours. If you have an iPod with color display you'll get around 15 hours of music playback. If you have an iPod mini (second generation) you'll get around 18 hours of music playback. If you have an iPod with click wheel you'll get around 12 hours of music playback. If you have an iPod mini you'll get around 8 hours of music playback. Anything older you are looking at around 8 hours of music playback. Note that all these times are fully charged iPod's and are an approximation, it could be a little less, and it could also be a little more. So have fun in choosing your iPod! DVD to iPod Touch Converter is a One-Click, All-In-One solution to convert DVD movies to iPod video,the software is also included in DVD to iPod Video Suite. Super fast (up to 400% faster than other solutions) DVD movie conversion speed with high video quality and advanced features gives you everything you need to turn iPod into a portable movie player. Watch iPod DVD movies on the go - a new lifestyle to experience.

* Optimized for SSE2/SSE/MMX/3DNow! and graphics card acceleration.

* Dolby, DTS Surround audio support

* High quality video in H.264 and MPEG-4 format. Support iPod to TV.

* Easy video crop and aspect ratio adjustment

* Subtitle and audio language change through DVD menu.

* Easy video splitting, customizing video quality and size before conversion. ipod touch converter maybe your must choose to watch dvd on your ipod.

As per a recent survey, ipods are considered the most 'in' thing among students of the UK. Such is the popularity of ipod that the youth in the UK has voted it better than drinking beer. Before you even get to the surface of the iPod, you encounter what could be called its aura. The commercial version of an aura is a brand, and while Apple may be a niche player in the computer market, the fanatical brand loyalty of its customers is legendary. A journalist, Leander Kahney, has even written a book about it, ''The Cult of Mac,'' to be published in the spring.

As he points out, that base has supported the company with a faith in its will to innovate -- even during stretches when it hasn't. Apple is also a giant in the world of industrial design. The candy-colored look of the iMac has been so widely copied that it's now a visual cliché. But the iPod is making an even bigger impression. Bruce Claxton, who is the current president of the Industrial Designers Society of America and a senior designer at Motorola, calls the device emblematic of a shift toward products that are ''an antidote to the hyper lifestyle,'' which might be symbolized by hand-held devices that bristle with buttons and controls that seem to promise a million functions if you only had time to figure them all out. ''People are seeking out products that are not just simple to use but a joy to use.'' Moby, the recording artist, has been a high-profile iPod booster since the product's debut. ''The kind of insidious revolutionary quality of the iPod,'' he says, ''is that it's so elegant and logical, it becomes part of your life so quickly that you can't remember what it was like beforehand.'' Tuesday nights, Andrew Andrew's iParty happens at a club called APT on the spooky, far western end of 13th Street. They show up at about 10 in matching sweat jackets and sneakers, matching eyeglasses, matching haircuts.

They connect their matching iPods to a modest Gemini mixer that they've fitted with a white front panel to make it look more iPodish. The iPods sit on either side of the mixer, on their backs, so they look like tiny turntables. Andrew Andrew changes into matching lab coats and ties. They hand out long song lists to patrons, who take a number and, when called, are invited up to program a seven-minute set. At around midnight, the actor Elijah Wood (Frodo) has turned up and is permitted to plug his own iPod into Andrew Andrew's system.

His set includes a Squarepusher song. Between songs at APT, each Andrew analyzed the iPod. In talking about how hard it was, at first, to believe that so much music could be stuffed into such a tiny object, they came back to the scroll wheel as the key to the product's initial seductiveness. ''It really bridged the gap,'' Andrew observed, ''between fantasy and reality.''  This is no eye opener for sure, as ipod is gaining immense preference not just in the UK but all over the world. Every pocket in the country has an ipod and these smart and sleek devices do not leave the pockets ever.