When one is searching to learn how to burn a DVD disc, one can start with the internet. Internet websites that will help with disc burning include: Windows Media Player on Microsoft, Real Player, and You Tube.
Once you have the CD or DVD ROM in your computer, and you have the file ready to be written on the disc, burn it to the disc. To do this, ... on Windows XP/Vista/7: File> Burn to disc When it says "Do you want to make this disc a data CD or a DVD?" Select DVD. Wait for it to eject the disc and then put it in a DVD player and it SHOULD work. terminator555
Once you have the CD or DVD ROM in your computer, and you have the file ready to be written on the disc, burn it to the disc. To do this, ... on Windows XP/Vista/7: File> Burn to disc When it says "Do you want to make this disc a data CD or a DVD?" Select DVD. Wait for it to eject the disc and then put it in a DVD player and it SHOULD work. terminator555
Burning a DVD on to laptop is just like buring DVD on to a common computer, except your laptop is mac. You just need dowloaded movie or videos on your laptop, a blank DVD disc, and a DVD burner. You can choose to burn the DVD on to a DVD disc to play it on your DVD player, or burn it to a DVD folder or ISO for backup.
See the question, How do you burn a DVD disc?
You have to have a 'dvd burner' kind of disc drive to burn dvds.
I think you may need a DVD copy to copy the DVD to another DVD disc. You could not "download" a DVD to your computer, but you could rip it to other video or movie files then burn it to another DVD disc.
No, I don't think so. When I burn my movies or videos to DVD, I think the file is recorded and converted to another format in the DVD disc I inserted.
Yes.
You need Nero or any other software to burn the disc, also you need a CD/DVD writer device on your computer.
Yes, DVDs are "read only memory" - which means your DVD drive only reads information from the disc (unless you have a DVD burner or "writer," but a burner will only burn to a disc if you specifically request it to.) Bottom line: no matter what you try to do, the disc will not be altered - unless you specifically tell you DVD program to burn to the disc.
Regardless of your operating system you need to "master" the DVD in order to use it in a DVD player. On Windows, insert a blank DVD into a DVD-writable drive and allow the computer to ask what you want to do. Tell the computer to "Burn a DVD video disc," add the files that you want to burn onto the DVD. After the files are encoded, the files are burned onto the DVD and finalized (the reason why it is called "mastered"). The disc is now playable on a DVD player. On Mac OS X, insert a blank DVD into your computer's DVD-writable drive or SuperDrive and open iDVD. Follow the wizard or create a custom disc and click the "Burn" button on the bottom of the window. After the disc is burned (and technically finalized), the DVD is able to be used in DVD players.
If using Windows, burning images to a DVD is a simple process of inserting the disc, and choosing Burn Files to Disc from the menu. Follow the instructions given by Windows, and drag any images you wish to burn into the empty folder in Windows Explorer. When you've chosen all the images, right click the DVD Drive image and click Burn to Disc.