Yes, older dvd players when there was a format war between the two may only be compatible with one or the other. The standard is now unofficially dvd-r. Most newer players support both standards now.
No.
Primera TuffCoat Plus 16x DVD-R Media is very fast.
Dvd-r or DVD+r are the most common types of dvds you can use to burn your own videos onto, you can also use a dvdrw which is a rewritable DVD, a dvdr usually says it can hold 4.7gbs of data, but in reallity it only holds just about 4.5gbs after formatting, most ripping software will also rip a dual layer DVD to a compressed rate of about 4.36gbs, so as to accommodate for the finished files to be able to fit on a dvdr, the best dvdr for me is a DVD-r, minus r dvds burn and work better in standalone DVD players as well as in computers, and most DVD burners these days are fully compatible with them, so your best bet is to get yourself some DVD-r's and start the burning, have fun.
1)Have your composites out. 2)Plug your composites into a DVDR. 3)Plug your DVDR composites into a tv or computer to record. 4)Put a blank disc into the DVDR. 5)Press the record button on the DVDR to start recording. (DOES NOT WORK WITHOUT RECORD BUTTON)
CDs cannot hold 4gb but a single layer DVDR can. CDs cannot hold 4gb but a single layer DVDR can.
DVD-R should roughly sell for 29 to 39 US dollars per spindle of 100.
no, you can only write to a dvdr once. A dvdrw can be rewritten on
A DVD-R is a DVD that is writable only once, but a DVD-RW is one that you can write to multiple times, with each rewrite the size decreasing somewhat.
You burn them as data on Nero or roxio
DVDr disks.
They are definetly one of the very best.
DVD is such an improvement over VHS that it doesn't matter.