What you have done so far is to rip a couple of DVDs to MPEG-2 (.mpg), so you may have the full original video, but de-interlaced so it is now in the progressive display format used by computer monitors and HD TVs. You could also play the ISO disc image using a software DVD player, including VideoLan's VLC, or rip it using your choice of DVD ripping software. You could burn this copy to another DVD for backup purposes. If you want to preserve everything on a DVD, then the simplest option is to copy the whole disc as an ISO disc image. The 720 x 480 format came from America's NTSC television system and 720 x 576 from Europe's PAL. MPEG-2 was the obvious choice for DVDs as it was already being used for broadcast and cable television. The result is a resolution of 720 x 576 pixels at 25 frames per second, for 50Hz TV sets, or a resolution of 720 x 480 pixels at 29.97 frames per second, for 60Hz TV sets. The video is interlaced for display on ordinary TV sets. The video is held in VOB (Video Object) files. Most DVDs store movies in the standard MPEG-2 format (aka H.262) defined by the Motion Pictures Expert Group, though MPEG-1 is also supported.
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