My objective was to rip a dvd to x264 mp4 at constant quality 25 with manual crop selected visually, custom chapter names with source preview to confirm correct chapter start times, multiple audio tracks, and multiple embedded subtitles. I was unable to achieve a single one of these requirements. In addition, I see no support for mkv which may be important to some people.
It is not a DVD ripper. It is an industrial-class transcoding suite.
It certainly handles chapter names, manual crops (visually or not), source and destination previews, multiple audio tracks (including Dolby Digital encoding and DTS if you have the right version) and all of that jazz. It does not handle DVD source formats, you have to extract a video file first, because it isn't a DVD Ripper. And it has a very high-quality set of filters and adjustments that can be made to the video (including things like stamping timecode and a channel mixer for audio).
It does not support MKV, which annoys me, but it really isn't targeted at that market with that kind of price. It supports practically any other common format, and I'm sure they'd add MKV if they got requests from professional users. MKV really isn't used outside of the "pirate" and "home users" arena, unfortunately.
I was most playing around mentioning it, as it is way above what most/any home users would need. But, since I have it, that's what
I use to make any MP4 I need, because it is quite powerful. It has a robust "watched folders" engine, and can gang multiple copies on separate machines into a transcoding behemoth cluster.