advice needed on DVD burning software, etc.

I have a huge collection of videos (not copyrighted, don’t worry), and I’m thinking about the growing need to transfer them to DVD. I will be buying a new computer within the next few months. Basically, I need to know any tips/hints you have on burning DVDs (software, the actual process, etc.) Also, do I need something special to copy DVD to DVD, or will the same software work?

The Washington Post did a little article about this on Sunday and reminded people not to buy discs that are incompatible with your unit. I have no clue what they mean by this–are they referring to only using Region 1 discs for Region 1 DVD players, or what? I feel like I may be up a creek if I’m not even sure what this means! http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A37905-2004Jul8.html

Re the WP article it’s a non-issue if you get a multi-format burner. The new multi-format DVD burners will work wth virtually all types of non-cartridge loading DVD blanks. I like Roxio 6 (ver 7 out now) for burning CD and DVD data files.

Re video capture & conversion you can get outboard processing units, but some of the better video cards have built in input ports for taking in analog video directly.

No matter what you do, bear in mind video conversion can be time consuming and is extremely resource intensive re CPU horsepower and hard drive space. You really need a system with some strong hardware legs to make the process go smoothly.

THE definitive source for dvd related copying/editing is http://www.doom9.org/

Make sure to check out their forums.

You’ll often find reference to a program called DVDShrink, which is what I use and strongly recommend.

One tip for you is to not compromise on your blank media, make sure you buy name brand because I’ve learnt the hard way that the cheap stuff will fail consistently.

Okay, this is a little long, but I hope you can make your way through it. :slight_smile:

To put video onto DVD you need to do the following things:[ul][li]Import the video into your computer.[]Edit the video while it is in your computer.[]Add menus and artwork to the DVD.[]Create the final disk image.[]Copy the disk image to a blank disk.[/ul]Some details…[/li]
**Import the video into your computer. **

If you have digital video, such as is recorded on a DV camcorder, you may be able to connect your recorder directly to your computer. Suitable software on the computer can instruct your recorder to play back its digital tape, and the video file is transferred directly to your computer.

If you have analogue video, such as is recorded on VHS tape, you will need to play it back into a “video capture device” that is connected to your computer. This device digitises the video, converting it to a video file which your computer can store. Video capture devices are available separately or as part of some video cards.

Special software and connections are needed for both these tasks. They are normally supplied as part of a video editing package, although you can use standalone software and hardware as well.

The imported video files will take up a LOT of space. Typically I require 20 gigabytes to store 1 hour of video. It also speeds things up to have multiple hard drives, with files on one and working space on another.

Many computers these days come with the high-speed serial connectors required for digital video input. (Thanks to competing groups of manufacturers, this connector has three different names, depending on who you ask: “IEEE1394”, “Firewire”, and “iLink”.)

Analogue video inputs, resembling those on the back of a VCR, are less common. You generally have to buy a video-editing package to get them.

Video-editing software will often communicate with the software that handles the importing, hiding some of the complexity.

**Edit the video while it is in your computer. **

When you edit the video, you indicate in the video-editing softwere which pieces of video you want to copy from your source files and place in your final output file. Various snippets can be cut, rearranged, modified. Sound and music can be added or removed.

At the end of the editing, you tell the video-editing software to generate an output video file. This is very time- and space-consuming.

Simple editing software comes with many computers. Complex editing software costs bucks, but is far more flexible.

This final output file can be recorded to tape. If our final goal was to make a VHS tape, that would be the end of the process. But a DVD is more complex, and requires more steps…

Add menus and artwork to the DVD.

During this step, you convert and compress the output video files to fit on the DVD. This is another time-consuming step.

Then you edit and add the menus and other artwork to help you navigate around the DVD. You can also add subtitles and additional audio tracks.

This is where different DVD software has dramatically-different capabilities.

The simple software looks at the video files presented to it and automatically creates basic menus. Complex software lets you design your own menus, import pictures, define what happens when you push the arrow buttons on the DVD remote, and specify all kinds of other behaviour.

I believe that the VCR-style DVD recorders automatically create simple menus. I’ve never used one; I really don’t know what the discs they create are like.

Create the final disk image

Once the menus and everything are in place, you create a disk image of the final DVD. The authoring software combines all the elements–menus, video, audio, subtitles–and builds a disk image according to the DVD standard.

Copy the disk image to a blank disk

You then burn the disk image to a blank DVD. It’s like copying a CD, but takes longer.

Different types of recordable DVDs

booklover, this is where the formats mentioned by the newspaper article come into it. There are three competing camps of manufacturers of recordable DVDs:

One camp makes the discs known as DVD-R and DVD-RW (“dash” discs).
One camp makes the discs known as DVD**+R and DVD+**RW (“plus” discs).
A third camp makes the discs known as DVD-RAM.

-R and +R discs are recordable once only, like CD-R.
-RW, +RW, and -RAM discs are recordable and erasible, like CD-RW.

The problem arises because many older recorders and standalone DVD players will handle “plus” discs but not “dash” discs, or vice versa. Newer devices can handle all the disc formats.

You can check machines’ compatibility with different recordable-disc formats through the database search at VideoHelp.com (see below).

This format difference has nothing to do with the movie studios’ DVD “Region Codes”. Recordable DVDs available to the consumer are not encumbered by region coding or the encryption that goes along with it. The DVD you make on your computer will play on any machine that can handle your television standard.

Some resources

A good place to start learning about DVDs is the DVD FAQ:

http://dvddemystified.com/dvdfaq.html

All kinds of questions about DVD, its features, and its history, are here on one long web page. Jim Taylor, author of the definitive reference book “DVD Demystified”, keeps this page up to date.
VideoHelp.com (also known as dvdrhelp.com, vcdhelp.com, and svcdhelp.com) has a vast collection of DVD tips, tricks, and software and hardware ratings.

Site volunteers maintain a database of DVD players, recorders, and computer drives, searchable by model, make, feature and compaibility.

There are how-to guides on such things as how to make your home videos DVD-compliant, and how to make DVD menus. There is also information on authoring VCDs and SVCDs, the discs that preceded DVDs.