Getting non-encrypted Blu-Ray content to play on your Mac.

MakeMKV Getting non encrypted Blu Ray content to play on your Mac.The lack of Blu-Ray support in Mac OS X is slowly driving me insane. As my Blu-Ray collection grows, my disdain for Apple executives snowballs. The fact that I can’t play Blu-Ray content on my three thousand dollar computer is absolutely infuriating. That said, just because we can’t play back commercially produced (Encrypted) Blu-Ray discs doesn’t mean we can’t enjoy unencrypted Blu-Ray content. To accomplish this, you’ll need MakeMKV and Handbrake installed on your system as well as access to a Blu-Ray drive.

HandBrake Getting non encrypted Blu Ray content to play on your Mac.Essentially, all you have to do is point MakeMKV to the index.bdmv file on your Blu-Ray disc, and then it will output a .mkv file which can be passed onto Handbrake. Once in Handbrake, you can compress it to play in Quicktime, iTunes, and on your AppleTV.

Remember, this only works for non-encrypted content. Cracking commercial content may be illegal in your country. Not to mention that it isn’t exactly easy to accomplish if you wanted to do so.

Photo Credit: pareeerica

  • Pingback: Macgasm Podcast #204 | Macgasm

  • Kevin

    The “non-encrypted” part is misleading, MakeMKV can actually process encrypted blu-ray discs including ones with BD+.

    • http://grantbrunner.com Grant Brunner

      I don’t believe it to be misleading. The methodology I explained is for non-encrypted Blu-Ray discs.

      Cracking copy-protection on Blu-Ray discs isn’t exactly straight forward, and it has all sorts of legal ambiguity.