I have DVD writer with me.I have Nero soft ware,but the DVD ’s burnt on it cannot be played on household DVD players.Advise me a free DVD burning soft ware,where theDVD’s can be played on house hold DVD players in India.

NERO s the best burning tool…

if yu want to play in players…. check d below steps.

First of all make clear that yu use version 6. If you have an older version that supports DVD (I think all the versions after 5.5.x.x) then the process is the same. Please make sure you start Nero Buring ROM and NOT the Nero SmartStart.

The new complication comes up. If you see a Wizard close it (there must be a button down right which says Close Wizard or something). Open the pull-down menu and select DVD.

NOTE: If there is no pull-down menu then your version does not support DVD

Select DVD-Video from the list in the left side..
select the ISO tab
in the menu.. file name length select max of 11=8+3
and character set=ISO9660

in label tab put a desired dvd name

then click on new…
At the left of your screen you see the folders of the DVD we are going to burn. Notice the VIDEO_TS folder is red. Double click to open the VIDEO_TS folder.

At the right of your screen you can see your hard drive. Browse to the folder where you have your DVD files (the files that DVD Shrink created).

Select all the files. I repeat: ALL the files.

Now drag and drop ALL the files you selected at the step before into the VIDEO_TS folder we opened before at your left.

The AUDIO_TS folder remains empty.
Now click the burn n its done.. :)

9 Meinungen für “What is the best and free, dvd burning soft ware?”

  1. maxgt1 sagt:

    try dvdflick it’s free and easy to use

    http://www.dvdflick.net/
    References :

  2. SERENE sagt:

    Burn almost any video file to a playable DVD

    Luckily for all of us, authoring playable DVDs from just about any video file has gotten a lot easier in the open source community. This week I’m going to show you how to burn those downloaded TV shows to a DVD you can play in your living room using the free (as in speech), open source application, DVD Flick.

    NOTE: DVD Flick’s almost embarrassingly simple to use, but since it’s a subject that can be confusing for people who haven’t authored many DVD’s, and it’s a question we’ve been asked about several times before here at Lifehacker, we thought DVD Flick deserved a quick guide.

    In a few simple steps, here’s how to burn almost any video file on your computer to a playable DVD.
    Step 1: Download and install DVD Flick

    DVD Flick is a free, open source DVD authoring tool that will take care of pretty much all of the legwork involved in authoring your DVDs. So thank the gods of open source and go download it here.

    In order to make a DVD that you can play on your DVD player, your video files need to be encoded in MPEG-2 format. What makes DVD Flick special (aside from the fact that it’s free) is that it handles all of the necessary transcoding of your AVI, MPG, MOV, and WMV files (among others) to MPEG-2, and then authors and burns your DVD all in one fell swoop - meaning it’s very simple for anyone to use.
    Step 2: Configure your project settings

    The DVD Flick interface is very no-nonsense - everything you need to access is available to you through the 7 buttons in the toolbar. Before we add videos to your DVD project, let’s take a look at the settings and make sure everything’s as you want it.

    Click the button labeled Project settings. By default you probably won’t have to change anything, but I do want to point out a couple of things.
    general%20tab.png

    The General tab lets you set the size of your target media (i.e., the capacity of your DVD). If you’re burning to a standard DVD-R, you’ll want to keep the default 4.3GB setting. However, you can also set your target size to Dual Layer DVD, Mini-DVD, CD-R, or your own custom target size.

    video%20settings.pngThe Video tab lets you set the format of your DVD player - namely whether your DVD should be NTSC or PAL-formatted. If you live in the US, NTSC is your pal. Most of Europe and Asia, on the other hand, use PAL. You can also set the encoding quality in the Encoding profile drop-down. If you feel that the quality of your authored DVDs isn’t high enough, you might want to try upping the quality and ensuring the "Second encoding pass" checkbox is ticked. If you’re more than happy with quality but you want to speed up the encoding process, you can lower the quality and get rid of the second encoding pass (you probably won’t want to do this, but just in case, there it is).

    Also of note, the Burning tab lets you set the options for the final product. If you don’t have a DVD on-hand for burning, for example, you can tell DVD Flick to create an ISO image that you can easily burn to a DVD later on using a tool like ISO Recorder or ISOBurn.
    Step 3: Add titles to your DVD

    As I said above, DVD Flick lets you add nearly any type of video file to your DVD project. The easiest way to do this is to open up the folder holding your video files and drag-and-drop the files into DVD Flick. The yellow bar on the left of the app shows you how much space you’ve used. The amount of video you can fit on one playable DVD will vary by length and quality, so keep an eye on your space.

    chapters.pngDVD Flick is pretty no nonsense at this point; you can’t build any fancy menu screens. [1] Instead, the DVD you author and burn will simply play each file as a chapter in the order you add them to the project by default. If you want to add chapters to individual video files, select the video/title and click on Edit title… and change the method of chapter creation. You can create chapter points every so many minutes, create a set number of chapters per title, or leave your video chapter-free.

    Advanced users can add extra audio tracks (like commentary) and subtitles through the Edit title menus as well.
    Step 4: Create your DVD

    destination%20folder.pngBefore you start, pick the directory that the transcoded files will be saved to while DVD Flick works. You’ll need to have a drive with a fair amount of space, so keep that in mind. You’ll also want to keep that in mind so you can remove those files after the process is complete so you don’t end up with a hard drive full of pre-burned DVDs.

    create%20dvd.pngNow that you’ve got everything set up how you want, click the button labeled Create DVD. DVD Flick will now start transcoding the video files and authoring the DVD while you sit back and browse the internet. If you’ve never done this before, you’ll learn quickly enough that video transcoding takes some time and CPU horsepower.

    If you don’t want DVD Flick to eat up precious CPU cycles while you’re wo
    References :
    http://www.softpedia.com/get/Multimedia/Video/Encoders-Converter-DIVX-Related/DVD-Flick.shtml

  3. bonny sagt:

    NERO s the best burning tool…

    if yu want to play in players…. check d below steps.

    First of all make clear that yu use version 6. If you have an older version that supports DVD (I think all the versions after 5.5.x.x) then the process is the same. Please make sure you start Nero Buring ROM and NOT the Nero SmartStart.

    The new complication comes up. If you see a Wizard close it (there must be a button down right which says Close Wizard or something). Open the pull-down menu and select DVD.

    NOTE: If there is no pull-down menu then your version does not support DVD

    Select DVD-Video from the list in the left side..
    select the ISO tab
    in the menu.. file name length select max of 11=8+3
    and character set=ISO9660

    in label tab put a desired dvd name

    then click on new…
    At the left of your screen you see the folders of the DVD we are going to burn. Notice the VIDEO_TS folder is red. Double click to open the VIDEO_TS folder.

    At the right of your screen you can see your hard drive. Browse to the folder where you have your DVD files (the files that DVD Shrink created).

    Select all the files. I repeat: ALL the files.

    Now drag and drop ALL the files you selected at the step before into the VIDEO_TS folder we opened before at your left.

    The AUDIO_TS folder remains empty.
    Now click the burn n its done.. :)
    References :

  4. Phelps sagt:

    If you want to burn any videos to DVD to play well on household DVD players, you need to use right dvd burning software to burn standard video DVD from your videos, because most household DVD players only recognize standard video DVD well, and i met the same error when use nero to burn video dvd, i think nero is good for burn data dvd, not standard video dvd, you have to try some better dvd burner program, there isn’t a good freeware can help you, because most are unreliable, I am using an inexpensive software RZ DVD Creator, works well, it can convert any formats videos to standard video DVD and burn to any dvd disc(DVD+R, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+RW, DVD-R DL, DVD+R DL, etc.), the burned standard video DVD can be played well on any region household DVD players. You can yahoo or google search RZ DVD Creator and download it, easy to use, hope it can help you too.

    At last you should note, some very old dvd player can’t read burnt dvd disc.
    References :

  5. Mike sagt:

    You may take a look at this download list, it collects 10 free DVD Burning software, they are totally free without any limitation and watermakr. I’m sure you will find one to burn DVD. I personally prefer to using imgburn.
    http://www.best-dvd-burning-software.com/top10-free-dvd-burning-software.html
    Email me if you need further assistant or use http://www.bing.com to search for more information.
    References :

  6. Victor sagt:

    I am using Total Video2Dvd to do this. Try converts any High-Definition video formats such as HD-DV, MKV, Bluray TS, TP, M2TS, AVCHD, WMV-HD, HDavi
    to DVD and all other popular video formats Youtube FLV, Xvid avi, Mov, Rmvb, Rm, Divx, Wmv, Asf, VOB, DV, 3gp, Ogm, Mpeg, Mpeg4, AVI to DVD formats.
    download it from
    —————-
    http://www.effectmatrix.com/total_video_to_DVD_Author/index.htm
    Also, you can search:
    http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Total+Video2Dvd&btnG=Google+Search&aq=o&oq=
    wish help and good luck.
    References :

  7. Gong sagt:

    ImTOO DVD Creator can convert and burn different video formats (even HD) such as AVI, MPEG, DivX, MKV, MP4, and WMV to DVD movies, as well as create DVD folders and ISO images from them.
    check it out: http://www.imtoo.com/dvd-creator.html
    References :

  8. Crazy sagt:

    I know a good dvd burning software, it can convert videos to DVD files(ISO, DVD folder) and burn videos to DVD discs. It can convert AVI to DVD, MPEG to DVD, MOV to DVD, MP4 to DVD, etc and directly burn DVD disc.
    I think you can have a try to use it, good luck!
    References :
    http://www.imoviesoft.com/products/dvd-maker.html

  9. John sagt:

    Usually the free program have limitations, so you’b better try a full version one, here i recommend you try Cucusoft DVD/VCD/SVCD Creator Pro, it enables you to convert and burn any video file directly to VCD, DVD, SVCD, MPEG1 and MPEG2 format.
    If you want to learn more, here is the link:
    http://www.macsoftreviews.com/cucusoft-dvd-creator-pro.html

    Following is the detailed guide if you want to have a try:
    http://www.macsoftreviews.com/how-to-copy-dvd-mac-and-burn-dvd-windows.html
    References :

Hinerlasse Deine Meinung