DVD
Burning Tips
The process of
"copying" a DVD is a
misnomer. Duplication of an original DVD movie involves three steps:
(1) Ripping
the DVD, (2)
Transcoding the DVD, and (3)
Burning the DVD to blank DVD media.
Copying the DVD
is simply reading the data on a DVD and "ripping" or extracting the data from the original DVD to a
temporary location on your computers hard drive.
Transcoding the
DVD - in simple terms - is the process of converting the "ripped" data
into a format suitable for placement (burning) on to a DVD-R.
Burning the DVD
is etching (writing) the transcoded data onto blank DVD media.
To Burn a DVD you will need:
-
A PC with a DVD Movie
copy application
installed.
See our
Test and
Review Chart of
guidance in selecting an application best suited to your needs.
- A built-in DVD/DVD-RW drive or an
external DVD Burner.
- Blank, writable or rewritable DVDs
to store all your information (each DVD-5 DVDs have a capacity of
4.7 GB and the dual-layered DVD-9s have a capacity of 8.5GB.
Additional Tips
- Prior to launching any DVD movie
copy application, we recommend rebooting your computer; especially
if you were running other applications such as word processors or
surfing the web. This act flushes out hemmed up memory.
- Temporarily disable your
screensaver during the DVD copy process. Screensavers are small
applications that consume valuable CPU cycles that otherwise can be
used for your DVD copy application. DVD copy applications are CPU
and memory intensive.
- Do not run any applications
concurrently while the DVD copying process. In other words, do not
use your computer to run other applications when you are copying a
DVD.
- Make sure you have plenty of memory
and hard drive space.
- Disable wallpapers. This frees up
additional memory.
- Set Windows to run for "Best
Performance." This can be done by going into the Windows Control
Panel/System/Advanced tab and checking the "Adjust For Best
Performance" radio button. This frees up memory and your computer
will run faster.
Note: In the past DVD ripping, copying, and burning process took a
very long time. In some cases, depending on the potency of your
computer, 10 hours or more.
With today's more powerful computers and dvd copy software the entire task can accomplished in less than an
hour; and, in many cases, less than 30 minutes.
Our number one
pick,
1Click DVD Copy Pro
is one such application that has been proven to copy a full movie,
with extras and menus in less than 30 minutes. Results will vary
slightly depending on your computer configuration. See our Test and
Review of
1Click DVD Copy Pro
here.
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Do you have an iPod? Then you will
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1Click DVDtoiPod |
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