How about something a little easier? Here's
Gordian Knot. If you install that and DVDDecrypter, you have all you need to do everything through making the avs. Install DVDDecrypter first or you'll have to set the path to it inside Gordian Knot later.
Run Gordian Knot and on the Ripping tab:
- Click the "Rip the VOBs" button to run DVDDecrypter. Use it to rip the DVD.
- Click the "Prepare the VOBs" button to run DGIndex. Open the VOBs and make the d2v project. This will also rip the audio into separate files.
Switch the the "Resolution" tab:
- Click the Open button in the bottom left corner and open the d2v file you created
- Set the "Input Resolution" to NTSC or PAL based on what the DVD was.
- Set the "Input Pixel Aspect Ratio" to 16:9 or 4:3 (look at the DVD case back - it'll say if the DVD is 16:9 encoded, otherwise it's 4:3 )
- Set "Crop (before resize)" to pixel and use the up/down controls next to the number fields on the right to crop all the black from the video (drag the knob on the preview window to a bright scene - that makes it easy to see what needs cropping)
Click on "Save & Encode" in the preview window. Set the deinterlacing if needed. Click on "Save" to create the avs script.
You can now quit Gordian Knot. You should now have some audio files that you can transcode with BeLight, and an avs file you can use with PSPVideo9 or 3GP or any other app you use to make PSP videos.