I just hate menus on DVD and BD because they are generally simply in my way and slow everything down.
I think we hit the crux of the issue for you here Brian. Sorry, but that is your problem, not ours.
Ripping the main title and saving it to the hard disk is all about just playing just the movie itself. It makes sense when that is all you want to do.
BD menu support is about browsing what is on the disc, exploring what is included, and deciding what should be permanently stored on the hard drive.
I don't like to do that with the optical disc, because it is slow, and menus are slow enough without adding optical disc reads, particularly with Blu-ray quality menu graphics. Not to mention that I have to use PowerDVD to do that, which means a totally different video and audio path for playback. The WDM is not the solution in this case, as it is too laggy and the movie quickly gets out of sync. I haven't set up any of the DSP that MC has in PowerDVD, including Room Correction. If I did all that in PowerDVD, why would I need MC for any BD playback? PowerDVD has pretty good media management these days. I might as well do all BD management in that. Oh yeah, and DVDs. Plus purchased digital movies, and... I don't like the PowerDVD interface and restrictions, jammed full of advertising and wasted space, which is why I have MC. I want a complete solution. A full ECO System one might say, even if it relies on some external software.
In fact I do not want to rip all movies I buy to the hard disk permanently. Many of the more obscure movies I would just like to make a record of it in MC so that I know it is available, and then leave it on the shelf in optical disc form, only. I rip new discs in full folder format, not ISO, and I want to be able to watch them using the BD menu. Then I will decide what to keep on the hard drives for long term use, convert it to a suitable form, probably MKV, and remove the rest.
So I want BD menu support for three reasons:
- To browse and view all contents of a new BD I purchase. Including all those annoying Trailers and advertisements, if they are a recent disc.
- To play BD that I decide not to store on the hard disk, and may require a refresh of my memory as to what else is on the disc.
- To go back to the optical disc of a movie I have on the hard drive, and watch for the first time or again the extras that I chose not to save to the hard drive. I often play just the movie early on and come back to the extras sometime later, but I don't want to keep the full BD on my hard drives for months or years, just in case I want to go back and review the extras.
Finally, leaving aside UHD BD, providing BD menus just completes the BD offering. Not providing it just leaves a big chunk missing. To me it feels like MC is broken. A crude tool that can't handle a very basic function; being able to see all the content on a disc. Sorry JRiver, but that is what it feels like, and that is one of the reasons that MC is a geeks tool, and not mainstream.