Computers & Internet Logo

Related Topics:

Posted on Feb 05, 2008
Answered by a Fixya Expert

Trustworthy Expert Solutions

At Fixya.com, our trusted experts are meticulously vetted and possess extensive experience in their respective fields. Backed by a community of knowledgeable professionals, our platform ensures that the solutions provided are thoroughly researched and validated.

View Our Top Experts

Encoding movie without burning

I need a bit of help. does anyone know if there is a way of encoding a movie and saving it on the computer without having to encode it each time i burn a copy. i use nero vision 4 to burn all my discs.

thanking you in advance

jackie

2 Answers

Anonymous

Level 3:

An expert who has achieved level 3 by getting 1000 points

All-Star:

An expert that got 10 achievements.

MVP:

An expert that got 5 achievements.

Vice President:

An expert whose answer got voted for 100 times.

  • Master 871 Answers
  • Posted on Feb 05, 2008
Anonymous
Master
Level 3:

An expert who has achieved level 3 by getting 1000 points

All-Star:

An expert that got 10 achievements.

MVP:

An expert that got 5 achievements.

Vice President:

An expert whose answer got voted for 100 times.

Joined: Jan 14, 2008
Answers
871
Questions
5
Helped
364119
Points
2104

Hi there jake

seems like you need a software that does not encode a movie but instead "convert" the movie directly for burning. am i right?

you can use...easymoviecreator.

this software may need a litlle understanding but when you get the hang of it, im sure that youll find it easy to use and light weight. but anyway, i dont know whats your preference on your way to "convert" or "encode" movies. this will also reflect on the size of the movie you need to convert or encode right?

so thats it. this is my suggestion thought. hope this helps your need.

:)

Anonymous

Level 2:

An expert who has achieved level 2 by getting 100 points

All-Star:

An expert that got 10 achievements.

MVP:

An expert that got 5 achievements.

Sergeant:

An expert that has over 500 points.

  • Expert 226 Answers
  • Posted on Feb 05, 2008
Anonymous
Expert
Level 2:

An expert who has achieved level 2 by getting 100 points

All-Star:

An expert that got 10 achievements.

MVP:

An expert that got 5 achievements.

Sergeant:

An expert that has over 500 points.

Joined: Jan 17, 2008
Answers
226
Questions
0
Helped
107351
Points
565

Ok

click here for download link of nero 8.0.
click on "click here if does not"

http://majorgeeks.com/downloadget.php?id=2228&file=1&evp=450ec55e744210853367639f39262fae

Ad

Add Your Answer

×

Uploading: 0%

my-video-file.mp4

Complete. Click "Add" to insert your video. Add

×

Loading...
Loading...

Related Questions:

0helpful
1answer

I need to know if a movie file must be .mov or .mp4 in order to be placed into the MOVIE section on my Coby Mp610-2G Mp3 player, because I've added some movies to my mp3 player but they show up on when...

Your player supports MTV files encoded at 160 x 128 and 25 fps. Videos may need to be encoded with the included software for device playback.
The video converter software can be downloaded from here:

http://www.cobyusa.com/?p=prod&prod_num_id=212&pcat_id=1001

Simply click on "Video Converter", save file and then launch it. I hope if you use this program you can enjoy movies on your player.
Good luck. Thanks.
gylacz
0helpful
2answers

Dvd write error

most likely its the wrong file type for the software you are tryin to burn the dvd with right click the movie file go to properties and see what file type it is
0helpful
1answer

Hi,is it me or the Toshiba Burner slow,there seems a few ways to Burn (movies)but the one that I have chosen comes up with a small field stating Encoding tthen gets going,evem old movies are taking 1 to...

Hello,

If you write a movie the settings or format of the movie is change to the user define format. In writing your movie first is the computer will reformat the movie file format to some standard format. If you were writing cd the format will be mpeg and if in dvd the format is avi. So if your movie file is not the same format as mentioned above then the computer will automatically change the format to the format standard requirements. That is why it takes time to reencode the movie file format. Then if you unit is not the same as specs with the latest gaming specs today then it takes time to re encode the movie file format. So the hardware specs is something to do with this. If you want to speed up your unit then add memory.

Thanks
2helpful
2answers

Writing multiple movies on single d v d

A standard DVD movie is about 8GB. However it is possible to put the same movie onto a CD. You will need to use MP4 or DIVX compression in order to squeeze it to fit. The quality is quite good. Google for free software to encode a DVD movie to AVI. Then you can burn it to DVD
0helpful
1answer

Windows DVD Maker for Vista (64) error

Well try to export the movie into mpg format and save it on to the Hard drive... then try burning the disc for any other software... like nero...etc.,
0helpful
2answers

MyDvd 9 wont let me burn a dvd

Here is a guide to convert avi to DVD. Click here
0helpful
1answer

Movie burning to a disc

Try re encoding the movie. Looks like the synchronization process got laggy. When you re encode, make sure there are no other memory intensive programs running.
1helpful
2answers

DVD movie onto a CD-RW

first off, your not going to get dvd quality on cd, if ur talking about a standard dvd that u wish to put on cd, dont even bother.

4GB(DVD) to 700MB(CD) ? re-encoding it to that size will look like crap.

enjoy
0helpful
1answer

Burning avi files to dvd

try version 8 works alot better!
0helpful
1answer

'Strobing' on finished DVD

Amy, We would need a few more details about your video in question. Origional movie filetype, method of encoding, software used to burn, capture card used to create file etc. I do know for sure that making an ISO instead of a burning the folders or video files as a data/video DVD really doesn't do anything to help you with this problem. Also are you burning a traditional DVD or like many new players will play divx, xvideo, and windows media files. All of which could be burnt to a CD or DVD, and I have seen many files act similar to what your describing. Basically try to encode the video with another program and check to make sure you are using the appropriate frames per second. Here's a link to a free encoder that really works great for me. http://flaskmpeg.sourceforge.net/ O yea if you are trying to copy a vhs to dvd or a dvd without ripping the dvd you will get uneven audio, and video problems its called MACROVISION. good luck, Hack
Not finding what you are looking for?

164 views

Ask a Question

Usually answered in minutes!

Top Computers & Internet Experts

Grand Canyon Tech
Grand Canyon Tech

Level 3 Expert

3867 Answers

Brad Brown

Level 3 Expert

19187 Answers

Cindy Wells

Level 3 Expert

6688 Answers

Are you a Computer and Internet Expert? Answer questions, earn points and help others

Answer questions

Manuals & User Guides

Loading...