You're welcome, although this takes a long time too as it's transcoding the video from the original MPEG-2 to H264. It takes roughly 5 hours of encoding time for every hour of movie time here even on a heavily overclocked Intel C2D PC running at 4GHz.
I guess what I'm really saying is that if your PC is going to be spending hours crunching away converting something then it might as well be making the best job possible of it rather than spending a similar amount of time turning out mediocre results via generic profiles with the likes of RipBot or Handbrake.
It all depends what you want...
If all you want is a watchable file and don't care about the file size then simply decrypting the original DVD and transferring the resultant VOB file to the Scroll works (as long as it's smaller than 4GB) as the Essential and Excel can both play unencrypted VOB files with no need to convert them to any other standard first. This can usually be achieved in a matter of minutes and loses you no quality whatsoever.
On the other hand, if you want to maintain as much quality as possible whilst making the file as small as possible then it has to be transcoded (ie, re-encoded from one standard to another) to achieve the size reduction, and this is always going to be a very lengthy process unless sacrifices are made in terms of the amount of compression you get and/or the quality of the resultant file.
The latter of the two approaches gives a compression ratio averaging around 4:1 with my custom profile, so you can fit roughly 4 times as many movies into a given space with relatively little loss in quality.
