a bad or corrupted DVD/CD that is only good for sitting drinks(hence coaster) on to stop moisture from ruining furniture.
Blockbusters? No. However, there are DVD concert recordings of Elton John and possibly hardly-heard-from video biographies.
"coaster" is slang for a bad burn, i.e. a failed burn that created an usuable disk. (So all it's good for is a coaster.)
Im pretty sure your refering to the song running by evermore.
Actually there are several Rolling Stones video recordings that are now available on DVD. One would be for example the great "Ladies & Gentlemen", originally recorded in 1972 and re-released in 2010. Another example would be "Some Girls: Live in Texas '78", originally recorded in 1978 and re-released on DVD in 2011.
HI, There's a couple types of DVD formats. DVD - and DVD +. It's the way the data was written to the disk. Many older DVD player's wouldn't play the DVD + recordings and it was a few years before the manufacturers included the `+` system in their players. Maybe that the reason your DVD won't play on someone else's machine. Hope this helps, Cubby
Infinately until the disc breaks or scratches or is unusable for some reason.
Try using the composite (analog) outputs from your cable box instead of the digital outputs.
There will not be a DVD release for the "Return of the Spice Girls" tour. This has been confirmed on their official website www.thespicegirls.com As far as we know no DVD quality footage was recorded at the shows, only audio for the BBC's radio 2. The only footage would be from the screens at the venues. And from people's personal recordings on camera phones and such. There will not be a DVD release for the "Return of the Spice Girls" tour. This has been confirmed on their official website www.thespicegirls.com As far as we know no DVD quality footage was recorded at the shows, only audio for the BBC's radio 2. The only footage would be from the screens at the venues. And from people's personal recordings on camera phones and such.
Screen captures and recordings of computer programs are possible, but because of the way that DVD and Bluray videos are processed through the video card, the Decompression is handled on the video hardware has passed it off, making It impossible to capture. Because of licensing rights and lobbying by motion picture studios, few DVD programs and almost no Bluray programs will do screen still captures.
James Berardinelli has written: 'ReelViews 2' 'Reel Views' -- subject(s): Catalogs, DVD-Video discs, Motion pictures, Video recordings
DVD-Audio is a digital format for delivering high-fidelity audio content on a DVD. It is not intended to be a video delivery format and is not the same as video DVDs containing concert films or music videos. It offers many possible configurations of audio channels with far higher audio quality.So DVD-Audio has much more functions than CD audio.DVD audio recordings can provide far better sound quality than CDs. The chart below lists the sampling rate and accuracy for CD recordings and the maximum sampling rate and accuracy for DVD recordings. CDs can hold 74 minutes of music. DVD audio discs can hold 74 minutes of music at their highest quality level, 192kHz/24-bit audio. By lowering either the sampling rate or the accuracy, DVDs can be made to hold more music. A DVD audio disc can store up to two hours of 6-channel, better than CD quality, 96kHz/24-bit music. Lower the specifications further, and a DVD audio disc can hold almost seven hours of CD-quality audio.In an audio CD or DVD, each bit represents a digital command telling the DAC what voltage level to output. While an ideal recording would follow the raw waveform exactly, digital recordings sample the sound at different frequencies, and therefore lose some of the data.
There are a couple of digitization services that can handle that format, which I do believe is audio. I think there used to be a place that did it in California, I will try and google to see if they still do. It was in Irvine, CA