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Showing posts with label Test DVD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Test DVD. Show all posts

Monday, October 18, 2010

How to Make DVD's

How to Make Your Own DVDs from Almost Any Video File



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If you’ve got a lot of AVI videos in your media collection, you might want to be able to play them on your DVD player—or even more likely, give a DVD to a family member to watch. Here’s how to create your own DVDs easily.
For the purposes of this guide we’ll show you how to do it using the freeware DVD Flick utility, or the Windows DVD Maker application bundled into some versions of Windows. Either one will work fine, though Windows DVD Maker will require installing extra codecs to be able to support every type of file.

Create DVD From Video files with DVD Flick

DVD Flick is a great open-source tool that handles almost any video file format and can convert and burn them into a DVD that can be used on almost any DVD player—in fact, we’ve covered how to use it before.
Once you’ve installed it, you can start the process by launching DVD Flick and clicking the Add title button on the upper left corner of the GUI.
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Then browse to the location of the video files you wan to convert and burn to DVD.
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Then you can move the files around and change the order of them.
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Go into Project Settings and select Burning. Then check Burn project todisc and give it a label. For best results it’s a good idea to burn at a slower sped and check Verify disc after burning.
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It also includes some default menu types you can choose from. They aren’t the most spectacular to look at, but they will do if you need a menu.
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Then click Create DVD  the encoding and conversion process kicks off. You can change the Process priority while the process is taking place.
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While you’ll probably want to do something else while the process completes (it can take hours depending on the size of the files and your hardware), click on Entertain me.
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This brings up a simple version of a Tetris game…which is a pretty neat extra feature.
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Or you can just minimize it to the system tray so it’s out of your way so you can do other tasks.
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It comes bundled with ImgBurn and since we selected to burn the project to disc it automatically launches and burns the DVD.
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When the process has completed successfully, you should have a screen that looks similar to this. Getting back to the amount of time it can take…notice it took 2 hours in this example. We burned 4 AVI files that were a total of 1.17GB.
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There you go! To make sure the DVD plays correctly you can test it out on your PC using your favorite player.
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This process doesn’t clean itself up though. You’ll need to go into the directory where the AVI files were converted to DVD and delete them.
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Test Your DVD

Test Your DVD

Before you go and hand the DVD out to a family member, you’ll want to pop the disc into a DVD player and make sure it works. We tested our discs on Walmart’s cheapest Magnavox DVD player and they worked fine.
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We’ve talked about a couple different ways to create DVDs, and you’ll want to choose the one you’re most comfortable with. While testing the Windows DVD Maker, on some systems we needed to install the correct codecs, while at other times we didn’t need to, so your mileage may vary.

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