
One contains the open source components, and the other contains the binary ones. The MakeMKV developers ship it in two tarballs. # dnf install zlib-devel openssl-devel expat-devel ffmpeg ffmpeg-devel qt5-qtbase-devel # dnf install "C Development Tools and Libraries" # dnf install $(rpm -E %fedora).noarch.rpm $(rpm -E %fedora).noarch.rpm It’s needed for FFMPEG, which MakeMKV relies on. Start off by enabling the RPM Fusion repository. Dependenciesīefore you can build MakeMKV, you’re going to need to install some development tools and libraries on Fedora. MakeMKV is in a state of perpetual beta testing for Linux, so it’s free of charge but also not officially supported. The source and binary blobs are available from the developer’s website. It isn’t distributed in Fedora’s repositories. MakeMKV is partially open source and partially proprietary. In fact, it is probably the most reliable way to work with and play Blu-Ray on Linux. MakeMKV is a powerful tool for working with DVDs and Blu-Ray.
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The difference in real world speed in using a 12x drive via USB 2 vs 3 is not worth the price difference in my opinion. This is a bit more than USB 2 can handle. Some desktop BR drives are 12x, which is a theoretical speed of 54 MB/s. Thereofore USB 2 is good enough for these drives. USB has a real world speed of around 35 to 40 MB/s.

This equates to 27 MB/s and 36 MB/s respectively. Portable BR writers are either 6x or 8x, which means a max theoretical speed of n X 4.5 MB/s.
