Author Topic: how to burn dvd  (Read 181699 times)

Anonymous

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #160 on: March 14, 2003, 11:40:45 PM »
YES PLEAE TELL US HOW TO BURN A DVD

Anonymous

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #161 on: March 25, 2003, 07:33:36 PM »
I have a dvd burner and a dvd I want to know how I can copy the dvd to my hd so i can later take the file and burn it with my dvd burner.

Anonymous

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #162 on: April 04, 2003, 05:12:24 PM »
how can we burn dvd\'s

Anonymous

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #163 on: April 08, 2003, 12:25:53 AM »
STOP YELLING!  All you need is a DVD burner and DVD X Copy.  The program is about $80-100 USD retail.

Offline djmayhem

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 1
  • Karma: +0/-0
    • View Profile
how to burn dvd
« Reply #164 on: April 17, 2003, 12:03:42 AM »
I just got the DVD XCopy from gnutella...it only took 30 sec with DSL. Anyways, whats the latest version out? and will this program also burn PS2 games?? Thanks

TechGuy

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #165 on: April 29, 2003, 03:01:15 AM »
Look dudes, You can not copy a DVD movie that is copy right with a DVDR or RW unless u bypass copyright.  There is a program called DVDXCOPY.  Is not free, so you'll have to buy it.  U might find it in Kazaa or Morphues, but is not legal to own a unpurchesed or copy title.  So do at ur own risk.

sucker

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #166 on: May 07, 2003, 07:27:34 PM »
[quote name=\'Anonymous\' date=\'Jan 16 2002, 08:05 PM\']Yo i now have a DVD-rom and a DVD burner how can i burn DVD movies.   Copyright bs pops up when i try to do this[/quote]
 capture from dvd player to movie ed. burn to dvd? cheap but thats all iknow

A human with no name

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #167 on: May 07, 2003, 07:39:08 PM »
DCESS can copy DVDs that are protected because a fifthteen your old boy from Europe learned that the early DVD's had encryptsion, but the key was a 5 digit number which was not encrypted. He realized that all the keys were 5 digits and created a program that cracks this key and allows you to RIP (Take information off a DVD and put it on your computer) DVDs. Now, once you RIP a DVD with a program like this, you can then use any program like NERO to copy the contents of the folder where you put the DVD information and copy it to a blank DVD, thus not having the encrypted part of the DVD go onto the new DVD. Be warned though, 2600 people from the west coast are in the process of being sued for putting up mirror sites for having links to this program or explaining how it is done. (http://www.rhythm.cx/dvd/) This website actually scanned the letter sent to them and put it up on his webpage. As far as I am concerned, when you get spam on your E-mail, reply with the guy who wrote the letter to the website owner's E-mail and let him get spammed for taking down his website.

Sorry, got off the subject. DVD X Copy is a new program which will make a copy of ANY DVD, including Playstation 2 games, or so they advertise. Haven't tried it yet but they have a trial version for 14 days and there are not cracks out for it yet to really experiment with the program, but garentee there will be soon enough. The only bad part of this program which might help the program stay legal from the Hollywood suers is that it will not make a copy from a copy. You need to have the origional to copy it because the copied DVD gets its own encryption from the program making the program recognize it, thus proventing future copying. But if you have the origional DVD you can copy it onto as many DVDs as you like. Note that Blockbuster and Hollywood Video has only origionals and are not smart enough to make copies for the public to prevent copying of their DVDs.

Hollywood was follish to believe no one would crack the DVDs only because most DVD copiers will trick the protection into believing it is PLAYING the DVD instead of copying and allowing the program to obtain the key that way.

I hope this was a help to you but all this information is out there on the internet, just most people I know don't like to read it and learn because it is time consuming and time is important. I read though so I will put my input in whenever I can to help others obtain what they need.

A human with no name or IP address!

some1

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #168 on: May 09, 2003, 10:27:35 AM »
i cannot believe the amount of usless posts made by retards.


vcdhelp.com will answer all your questions


riped dvd's converted to SVCD are very good quality
riped dvd's converted to XVCD  are pretty good quality
riped dvd's converted to VCD are alright quality


Dumb and need a program to do the work for you get VCDEASY or similar programs there are plenty out there.


If you want to copy DVD-DVD use DVD2One it will copy any movie to 1 dvd-9+)r(w)

Guest

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #169 on: June 11, 2003, 05:09:37 PM »
[quote name=\'Anonymous\' date=\'Dec 10 2001, 08:52 AM\']To burn a DVD that will run on any DVD drive, you're best bet is a DVD-R drive. In the UK, you can pick them up for £2000. (US 00). You'll then need the latest version of Nero, which can write DVDs. Unfortunately, if you want to do straight copies of DVD movies, you'll have some trouble. There is some damn hard to crack copy protection sitting there.

So far as i know, straight DVD copying is impossible. It can be done CD to CD though, with CloneCD, which copies the physical CD instead of the information on it. Which gets round the copy protection. I don't think there's anything like that available for DVDs though.

BigAndy
[email protected][/quote]
you can break the copyright codes by downloading a dvd decriptor

Offline jpbirch

  • I can't follow the rules
  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 3
  • Karma: +0/-0
    • View Profile
how to burn dvd
« Reply #170 on: June 12, 2003, 08:56:38 AM »
there is actually a program called DVD2VCD basically it's a convertor whether you need a DVD-rw or not I am unsure but I will look into this for you and get back in touch.

Sam Goodman

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #171 on: June 21, 2003, 10:59:08 AM »
OK here is the senario:

I have a DVDRAM recorder hooked up to my home entertainment system. I have easily burned about 40 movies. Now the question is, can I bring those DVDRAM disks into my office and reproduce them onto DVDR? Can I buy a DVDROM drive that reads RAMs? Then buy a DVDR/RW recorder that will write to Rs? Put both drives in the same PC and reproduce my DVDRAMs which do not have copy protection after I make them, down to DVDR which almost all DVD players will play.

Let me know if you have done this or have any ideas.

Ck

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #172 on: July 16, 2003, 11:42:38 PM »
I have a dell with a 16x dvd player and in bay one and a 4x DVD R/RW in the second bay, HOW CAN I COPY COPYRIGHTED DVDS????  i was told i can do it without a program, just a process, please help!!!  Email me at number1ckEmail Removed

Kshultz

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #173 on: October 09, 2003, 01:46:50 AM »
does anyone know how to turn a dvd into vcd or svcd format????

Offline gtaz21

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 1
  • Karma: +0/-0
    • View Profile
how to burn dvd
« Reply #174 on: December 17, 2003, 02:46:59 AM »
I am having a problem burning DVD to DVD with my new Sony DW-U14A burner. I am using DVDXCopy. During the read (rip) I am encountering errors at about the same point every time. The error usually occurs about 15 mins into the read while I'm on the VTS_01_2.VOB file. I have a feeling it is something about my system that's causing it, or something I'm not setting correctly in the software. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks.

chooch

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #175 on: January 07, 2004, 02:16:48 AM »
absolute easiest way to copy any dvd is

rip the dvd to your HD using DVD Decrypter (it removes copy protection) http://images.thetechguide.com/forum/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/ohmy.gif\' class=\'bbc_emoticon\' alt=\':o\' />  
then use  DVD2ONE it shrinks size from 8gigs down to 4.4gigs(everything all menus & extras) http://images.thetechguide.com/forum/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/wink.gif\' class=\'bbc_emoticon\' alt=\';)\' />

then just burn with Nero 6 Ultra http://images.thetechguide.com/forum/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/biggrin.gif\' class=\'bbc_emoticon\' alt=\':D\' />

Hope this helps someone http://images.thetechguide.com/forum/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/cool.gif\' class=\'bbc_emoticon\' alt=\'B)\' />

ScissorHands

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #176 on: January 07, 2004, 06:03:31 PM »
You are all doing it the hard way.  There is a freeware program available now for backing up your DVD's.  It's called shrinkdvd.  

A normal dvd that you buy at blockbuster has 2 layers of data on it (9.4 Gig).  A blank dvd+r or dvd-r has only one layer (4.7 Gig).  So you either need to pull some of the data out of the burn (menu's, extra audio channels, subtitles, deleted scenes....) or you need to split it over 2 discs, or... you can recompress it to make everything fit on one disc instead of 2.  

Some movies will fit on 1 disc if you burn the movie only.  Others will fit menu's, movie, features, everything on just one disc (not many, but I have seen a good many in my collection).  But most of the time if you want to make a copy of the whole thing with features, menu's and everthing you will want to recompress.  

This program does a very good job of recompressing the move and can do it in as little as 20 minutes.  A single pass will take about 20 minutes.  A 2 pass analysis will take about an hour or so but with considerably better quality.  

Just for the record... I have a 9 foot screen with an LCD projector and yes I can see a small difference when I recompress, but that is on a 9 FOOT SCREEN!!! (Of course I know what to look for.  The average user will notice that the copy will be no different from the original unless you are using a HDTV of considerable size...... On my 36 inch TV it looks the same as original.  

Even if you watch on a 9 foot screen,  the recompress is great quality... very close to the original disc.

You can also choose to rip just the movie and not the features with this program.  This way you may not need to recompress.  If the movie alone is too big to fit the application will recompress it just a little so that it will fit.  (It really is a cool program.)

I have DVDXCOPY Platinum and Express, and Smartripper and DVD-Decrypter and DVD-Fab.  I spent more that my share on these items and I still choose ShrinkDVD for all of my latest backups.

Anyway,  you can download shrinkdvd from doom9 or just search google for it.


Hey It's free!!!  And works great.  


Oh yeah, you still need a program to burn the files that it produces (nero, easy-cd, whatever will let you burn dvd-video discs.....your burner probably came with what you will need.

Guest

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #177 on: January 13, 2004, 08:07:16 AM »
OK, I've got lectures I've downloaded from a University, the lectures are in wmv format, I want to burn them to DVD.  I recently purchased a sony laptop with a dvd rw/cd rw drive, but I'm not sure about how to get the wmv file burned to the DVD, thanks for any and all help

Mmagnus

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #178 on: January 25, 2004, 04:25:41 PM »
Hmm.. I have the .bup, vob and ifo files, and the only way Ive tried to burn em is to put them in a VIDEO_TS folder and burn them as a data-dvd.
This works good except for that the menus dont work...

Is it the files or the way Im doing it thats thers somthin wrong with?

mik

  • Guest
how to burn dvd
« Reply #179 on: January 26, 2004, 08:57:31 PM »
i just got a new dell inspirion 1100 and was wondering can i burn a dvd+r/dvd+rw on a regular dvd/cd-rw combo?