With 1080P hitting the new iPad and Apple TV last month, some of you are perhaps now looking to send your Blu-ray collection over to iOS devices.

Here is the easy part: Buy a Toshiba Lightscribe Blu-ray Player for just $42 with free shipping (via 9to5Toys). It also burns DVDs, and Lightscribe media will even do some art on the cover. Oh, and it is USB bus-powered, so it is nice and portable.

Update: There is a white version!

Toshiba advertises it as “Mac compatible,” but we all knew that the late and great Steve Jobs viewed Blu-ray as a “bag of hurt” from the “mafia.”

So, the hard part is getting Blu-rays to your Mac….

Macworld recommends the free MakeMKV application to pull data into an .MKV file. From there, you can use VLC to watch the video, or use your favorite converter to move the video to iOS devices. There are a bunch of paid options for watching Blu-ray’s directly and turning them into iOS compatible files.

Woogy in the comments below reccomends:

Step 1. Rip Blu-Ray with MakeMKV. Select the biggest file because that is the main title Step 2. Use MP4tools to remux the MKV file into a MP4/M4V file Sept 3. Find a copy of Handbreak 9.5 (newer version no longer lets you target file size) make the target file of conversion between 2GB and 3GB (2048MB and 3072MB). Step 4. Get iFlick from M.A.S to tag and auto add the files to iTunes.

For lossless Audio.

Discuss below

  • VLC 2.0 arriving with all-new UI, native full screen in Lion, Blu-ray support, more (9to5mac.com)
  • Poll: Would you enjoy a MicroSD Card slot in your iOS device? (9to5mac.com)
  • Sony 46″ 120Hz 1080p 3D LED HDTV w/ Blu-ray Player for $1,000 + $36 s&h (9to5toys.com)
  • Sony 46″ 240Hz 1080p 3D LED LCD HDTV w/ Blu-Ray Player for $1,200 + $36 s&h (9to5toys.com)
  • Apple’s 1080p compared with Blu-ray: Not too much difference (9to5mac.com)