My understanding is that CloneCD will only make 1 to 1 exact copies of DVD movies. CloneDVD will re-encode movies so they will fit on media with less capacity. Many DVDs require dual-layer media for 1 to 1 copies, CloneDVD will make those fit on single-layer media. CloneDVD also allows you to perform some basic edits (like remove advertisements, alternate tracks,etc.). As far as I know CloneCD doesn't let you perform any edits.
-mwb1100
Thank you, this is very useful information.
However, if you're only going to get one thing from Slysoft, seriously consider AnyDVD.
-mwb1100
Yes, I've figured that out, but AnyDVD seems pretty useless by itself, so it looks like you need to buy three products, and that's almost $100. Subtract the discount, add 20% VAT, still $100
Finally - if you're considering buying from Slysoft, they've announced that starting on Jan 1 their products are going to be sold in Euros instead of Dollars (while keeping the numbers the same). In effect, this is a 40% price increase. So if you're going to buy you should do it before then.
-mwb1100
I've seen that, yes
I must say this part seems somewhat disingenuous to me:
Effective January 1, 2008, SlySoft will switch its pricing from U.S. dollars 1:1 to Euro. This will result in a price increase of about 40%. Nothing is stopping Slysoft from ensuring the conversion to Euro does not result in a price hike (or just upping the price in USD), they've just chosen to convert at 1:1 ratio.
The thing is, I've only seen one CD (a data CD I wanted to make a backup copy of) that I couldn't copy with Nero. That was a month ago, and I tried CloneCD, fully willing to buy it if it could copy that one disk - but it could not, either. Wouldn't even tell me what protection the CD was using or what the problem was. Through investgating files on the disk I found out it was SecureDisk (or was it SecureDrive?), which CloneCD claims to support.
I've never needed to copy a DVD disk yet - ever, though I expect this will change as I move my own storage to DVDs. I hardly watch any movies on DVD, so it's not a concern, but I do buy live (concert) DVDs occasionally, and I want to be able to extract audio tracks off those DVDs. (I have a dozen or so live DVDs I have never watched, but I listen to the audio tracks often). I used a program called DVD Audio Extractor once, trial version, but it didn't work with newer of those DVDs, so I had to resort to playing the DVDs on the computer and recording the audio stream. If CloneDVD doesn't do this yet, it seems like a good fit for its featureset.