Here's how I manage my (extracted DVD's):
I rip them to my HD's in a folder called as the title: f.e. "Jaws" or "Dirty Harry".
I put the movie poster as a 300x430 JPEG called "folder".
I import them in MC12. Here it gets perhaps confusing:
I use "Fill properties from filename" (Library Tools) and use "[Title]\VIDEO_TS" and then "[Album]\VIDEO_TS".
I added title for naming the DVD/movie title.
Then why do I use "Album" too? With album I sort my movies. To keep track of f.e. Star Wars movies the "Title" is "The Empire Strikes Back" and "The Phantom Menace" where the "Album" is named "Star Wars 5" and "Star Wars 1" I sort with this string:
Album (a-z)
Series (a-z)
Season (a-z)
Episode (a-z)
Title (a-z)
Thumbnail text:
[Series] [Season]
[Title]
[Date (year)]
This way I get everything the way I want it:
As you see I have everything the way I want it:
Star Wars following 1-6 (not alphabatically because that would put them in the wrong order)
(Also helps with series with Roman numbers to keep them in order.)
I can chose to add "Star Wars" in "series" which would put "Star Wars" above the movie title.
As you see with (TV) Series it's the same deal. You get episode number, title, season all as you like.
The only thing you have to keep in mind that you change the "Album" tag into the tag you need with series etc. When not, you leave it as it is.
I also add "Actors", "Director", "Genre" and "Year". This is a bigger job but with IMDB.com I copy them into the fields.
With series I have this structure in folders:
Friends Season 1\01. The One Where...\VIDEO_TS\
The purpose of everything on HD is that everybody in the house has access to the music, images, video's without having to get/search the original disc(s).
And like Mastiff says: with HD's being this large and cheaper almost every month why going through all the trouble of making DivX etc if sound and picture gets worse.
However for some tv series it would not be too bad having them on DivX but it's the time issue that keeps me away from DivX for now.
Maybe this helps.
Regards,
Theo