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DVD Video - Copying DVDs - how's it done? |
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#1 |
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Hi There,
My band has just recorded a 30 minute live video on Mini DV which will be transferred to a DVD by the company responsible for the filming. The video company don't do duplication and (being cheapskates) ideally, we don't want to go to the expense of employing a duplicating firm, as we only need a small number of DVDs for our agents to promote us with. However, unlike a CD (where you simply put your master copy in the reader and a blank in your burner to clone it), a little research suggests that there is a little more to cloning a DVD than I thought. The size and format issues are all rather confusing and although there are many websites that discuss this issue, many seem to go into too much detail and too much jargon and I can't seem to find one that doesn't assume that the reader has prior knowledge. So I need a little help please. I realise that there are copyright implications and that some commercial DVD releases have copy protection devices built in, but since we own the copyright this is not an issue in this case. Also, we don't need to stop the DVD being cloned ourselves, so we don't need to add any copy protection (in fact we'd probably welcome cloning for the extra publicity from the wider circulation it would mean that we were getting). I have Pinnacle Instant CD and DVD burning software, which was supplied with a DVD burner that I recently purchased and I'll need to produce copies of the DVDs that a standard DVD player can read and playback, as well as DVD's that can be viewed on a PC (for people who want to see it who don't own a DVD player, but do have a PC). I need to know how to go about duplicating both data and audio visual DVDs and whether or not I need to buy any particular size and type of blank disks, or any more software to do the job. In addition, since the master DVD will probably be in the form of and Audio / Visual DVD that can only be viewed on a DVD player (rather than as a datafile which can be read by a PC), I will also probably need to know how to convert such a file into something that can be read by my computer and then duplicated on a data DVD, for playback on a PC. By the way, if it is a case (as I suspect it will be) of writing the contents of the master disk to the hard drive before writing it from memory to a blank (to ensure a fast transfer of data), I have a 320gig hard drive, so storage shouldn't be an issue for 30 minutes of DVD video. In addition, my PC is a fairly new and high spec machine, so processing power and speed shouldn't be an issue either. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks in anticipation and sorry if this has been raised elsewhere but so much has been posted that it's "needle and haystack" time. WAL WAL |
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#2 |
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Posts: n/a
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Since you made the DVD yourself you own the copyright and there is no copy
protection on the DVD. So, to copy it here's what I would do. 1) Get Nero. 2) Make an ISO file of your orignial DVD (choose 'image recorder' instead of your DVD burner). This will make an 'image' of your entire DVD. 3) Burn that ISO file as many times as you want. You could just do a disc to disc copy, but that would read the source DVD each time. The above image file bypasses that. It reads it just once and you can burn that file all you want. "WAL" <> wrote in message news: oups.com... > Hi There, > > My band has just recorded a 30 minute live video on Mini DV which will > be transferred to a DVD by the company responsible for the filming. > > The video company don't do duplication and (being cheapskates) ideally, > we don't want to go to the expense of employing a duplicating firm, as > we only need a small number of DVDs for our agents to promote us with. > However, unlike a CD (where you simply put your master copy in the > reader and a blank in your burner to clone it), a little research > suggests that there is a little more to cloning a DVD than I thought. > The size and format issues are all rather confusing and although there > are many websites that discuss this issue, many seem to go into too > much detail and too much jargon and I can't seem to find one that > doesn't assume that the reader has prior knowledge. So I need a little > help please. > > I realise that there are copyright implications and that some > commercial DVD releases have copy protection devices built in, but > since we own the copyright this is not an issue in this case. Also, we > don't need to stop the DVD being cloned ourselves, so we don't need to > add any copy protection (in fact we'd probably welcome cloning for the > extra publicity from the wider circulation it would mean that we were > getting). > > I have Pinnacle Instant CD and DVD burning software, which was supplied > with a DVD burner that I recently purchased and I'll need to produce > copies of the DVDs that a standard DVD player can read and playback, as > well as DVD's that can be viewed on a PC (for people who want to see it > who don't own a DVD player, but do have a PC). > > I need to know how to go about duplicating both data and audio visual > DVDs and whether or not I need to buy any particular size and type of > blank disks, or any more software to do the job. In addition, since the > master DVD will probably be in the form of and Audio / Visual DVD that > can only be viewed on a DVD player (rather than as a datafile which can > be read by a PC), I will also probably need to know how to convert such > a file into something that can be read by my computer and then > duplicated on a data DVD, for playback on a PC. > > By the way, if it is a case (as I suspect it will be) of writing the > contents of the master disk to the hard drive before writing it from > memory to a blank (to ensure a fast transfer of data), I have a 320gig > hard drive, so storage shouldn't be an issue for 30 minutes of DVD > video. In addition, my PC is a fairly new and high spec machine, so > processing power and speed shouldn't be an issue either. > > Any help would be appreciated. > > Thanks in anticipation and sorry if this has been raised elsewhere but > so much has been posted that it's "needle and haystack" time. > > WAL > Large Farva |
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#3 |
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Posts: n/a
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On Wed, 04 Jan 2006 20:47:01 GMT, "Large Farva" <>
wrote: >Since you made the DVD yourself you own the copyright and there is no copy >protection on the DVD. >So, to copy it here's what I would do. >1) Get Nero. DVD Decrypter is free, so is DVDFab Decrypter. >2) Make an ISO file of your orignial DVD (choose 'image recorder' instead of >your DVD burner). This will make an 'image' of your entire DVD. >3) Burn that ISO file as many times as you want. -- Aleph-null bottles of beer on the wall, Aleph-null bottles of beer. You take one down, and pass it around, Aleph-null bottles of beer on the wall. Bob |
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#4 |
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