I have a movie on my HD but I am not sure if it is DivX or not. It's about 702 MB and I want to burn it to DVD b/c my dvd player and ps2 do not play CDr. What's the quickest way to do this. I have tried reading the tutorial but it confused me and I just got the sound on dvd but no video. Also since a DVDr is big can I put multiple 700+ MB movies on it and will it play? HELP!
use vso"s dvixtodvd to convert your file and burn to disk, can you view the movie that is on your hd? you might try using g-spot and that will tell you what kind of file you have
ok what kind of file is it? did you use g-spot to find out what kind of file it was? where did you get the movie from? did you rip a dvd? did you download it from the net? all so try using convertxtodvd, it will do allmost any file, if you want help need some more info on the file! also most dvd players will play vcd's or svcd's, unless you have a real old dvd player, also if you right click on the file and go down to properties and click on it ,it should give you the name of the file exetention.
ok i used Gspot and it is an Xvid. It is a video file Mpeg and I can play it with Windown Media Player. Now how do i get it on DVDr already the other program didnt work for me.
you must be doing something wrong convertxtodvd will work on just about everything encluding xvid, theese files are the ones that the likes best, have you tryd any other converting programs? you might try googling xvid encoding to vob, and the one on top of the list should convertxtodvd, but you search and use the one that would be the best one for you, i have gave you what work's for the most of anyone that one who wants to convert that type of files.
Wrong. Install XviD, and go to XviD's directory (e.g. C:\Program files\XviD). Search Nic's FourCC changer (a small - 6 Kb - file named AviC.exe). Running that program, you can load an AVI file. If on the page it is shown you used DivX, all if fiine. If XviD is instead shown, Change to DivX the FourCC code (I think you can change both the FourCC Description Code and Used Codec information). After that, burn a Data DVD containing all the AVI files you can fit (e of them, since 6*700 = 4200 MB and a DVD5 = 4489 MB). If your player plays DivX videos, it will be joked by that trick and will play XviD AVI, too. It seems strange, anyway. Your DVD player can read DivX movies, bat doesn't read CD-R?