Creating Your Own DVD
Creating your own DVD is getting easier with every passing improvement of dvd authoring software package. Some programs offer DVD Authoring from the timeline, meaning you're able to place chapter markers, composing the entire DVD right from the edit timeline. In some cases, if you're not looking for fancy menus and all you want to do is lay your timeline's contents to DVD.

If your computer does not have its own DVD writer, you can purchase a DVD burner that can handle all the popular DVD formats, like DVD+R, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD-RW, and even the CD-R formats. That way you can be sure that your finished DVDs will play on just about any player.

Where the authoring tools are included in an editing program, it will pull everything together automatically without you having to know the inner workings of the process. You do not have to worry about creating backgrounds, buttons, and windows because all are provided.

It's worth producing a test burn of a short section of your video on a rewritable disc in order to check quality prior to undertaking the final project on a DVD disc. Every application offers its own method of setting the marks that identify the beginning of the selected video sequence. With the program's editing and disc authoring functions sharing the same interface, it's much easier to set chapter marks and edit menu screens than if you were reliant upon two separate applications.

When a DVD has been assembled, and you are finished testing using the built-in simulator software or your authoring application, you have a couple of choices for finishing the project, including burning the project directly to a DVD and building the project to your hard drive for testing and playback off your computer.

In order to place a large amount of high quality video footage onto a DVD disc, the footage must first be converted from the native DV stream to a format that all DVD players will recognize. This is MPEG-2, a highly compressed format that manages to maintain almost all the original DV quality while dramatically reducing the total file size. For the best reproduction, choose the highest video and audio bit-rate setting you can in relation to the available target disc space.

The key reason is that it is the most compact, last expensive, and most reliable way to present, distribute, and archive digital video movies. Not only are DVDs much higher quality than previous home video formats, they're cheaper to master and duplicate.

And when you're done, you will be able to view your DVD movies with pinpoint control, through customized menu screens and quick-view features. Converting existing videos into the long-lasting, high-quality DVD format. It couldn't be easier. DVD movies are better quality than VHS video and last a lifetime.

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