It depends upon you DVD player. If you have simple DVD player then it will play mpeg2 format which are in the .vob files and ac3 which is audio format. It should also play the mpeg1 format which is usually in .dat or called video cds. The new DVD players also support xvid or divx codecs.
how many types of formats play in DVD
Sure all of the DVD players play the JPEG Formats. Also they play .jpg and .png formats.
most DVD players often plays DVD formats. But if the DVD player is supported by avi file reader then it could probably play
A DVD player cannot play a BluRay disc. A BluRay player can play both BluRay discs and DVDs.
I have a three year old toshiba dvd player what format does this take because it will not play in avi format
Because not everyone of the DVD player can play mp4 formats. Best way is convertting mp4 to dvd.
The PS3 can play a number of DVD formats
Yes DVD Video Maker aims to be a tool to convert various PC video formats to a DVD that can be played on pretty much any standalone DVD player.
A DVD player that supports all formats would need to be a universal or multi-region player. These players are capable of playing DVDs from any region and supporting various file formats such as DVD-Video, DVD-Audio, DVD-R, DVD-RW, and more. Look for a player with a wide range of codec support, including MPEG-2, MPEG-4, DivX, and AVI, to ensure compatibility with different formats. Additionally, ensure the player has the necessary connections such as HDMI, USB, and SD card slots for flexibility in playing different types of media.
No, a Canadian format DVD, which typically uses NTSC, will not work in a PAL format DVD player. PAL and NTSC are two different video formats with incompatible encoding systems. To play a Canadian NTSC DVD on a PAL player, you would need a multi-format or region-free DVD player that supports both formats.
ImTOO MPEG to DVD Converter can convert MPEG1, MPEG2, MPEG4, and MP4 to DVD and burn them on DVD which can play on home DVD player.
The formats in which a recordable DVD player can playback will depend on the format used to record the DVD. The most common format is DVD-R which is used by computer DVD writers as well as most DVD recorders.