Technology6 mins ago
why won't my dvd play discs just burnt from computer?
i have downloaded a movie and have been able to watch on my computer, just burnt it and then tried to play on my dvd plaer but comes up with 'unknown disc', i'm new to all this and have not got a clue what to do.
please help.
please help.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by LADYBUG76. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Many DVD players will not play "home made" discs. It's an anti-piracy measure. Strangely though, it's the more expensive players that won't work.
We have two players. One is an all singing, all dancing expensive one and won't play any of our home made DVDs. The other is a cheap one from Tesco and that works fine.
We have two players. One is an all singing, all dancing expensive one and won't play any of our home made DVDs. The other is a cheap one from Tesco and that works fine.
nah nah nah
its a divx in my opinion
and not all uk players play them
your pc will
simple really
btw after a few years or even sooner a players laser can get knocked out of alignment
theer are actually onl a few manufacturers in the world of dvd players
the biggest as far as im aware is shinco in china
they make dvd players for panasonic and hundreds of other companies too.
its a divx in my opinion
and not all uk players play them
your pc will
simple really
btw after a few years or even sooner a players laser can get knocked out of alignment
theer are actually onl a few manufacturers in the world of dvd players
the biggest as far as im aware is shinco in china
they make dvd players for panasonic and hundreds of other companies too.
if you have downloaded a movie it will have a filename, and an extension to the file name, such as:
mymovie.avi
(you may need to change your computer settings to view the file extension. By default windows usually does not show it).
The extension at the end (avi for example) denotes what type of format the file is. So if it ends in "avi" people say it is an avi file.
There are many types of extensions (such as mov or mpg) and most of these can only be read by a computer.
If you put a DVD with an avi file on it in most DVD players it will have no idea what to do with it.
*SOME* DVD players will play avi files, but you need to buy one that specifically says it plays avi files.
To get a "normal" DVD player to play a movie you need to convert it into the same format used by "proper" DVD disks.
mymovie.avi
(you may need to change your computer settings to view the file extension. By default windows usually does not show it).
The extension at the end (avi for example) denotes what type of format the file is. So if it ends in "avi" people say it is an avi file.
There are many types of extensions (such as mov or mpg) and most of these can only be read by a computer.
If you put a DVD with an avi file on it in most DVD players it will have no idea what to do with it.
*SOME* DVD players will play avi files, but you need to buy one that specifically says it plays avi files.
To get a "normal" DVD player to play a movie you need to convert it into the same format used by "proper" DVD disks.
leggysback is right, you can`t just burn an avi file to disc to play in a dvd player. You need to download an avi to dvd converter. Sothink is a free one which you can download.
The conversion takes ages and slows your computer almost to a standstill, I usually leave mine converting and burning when I go to bed.
The conversion takes ages and slows your computer almost to a standstill, I usually leave mine converting and burning when I go to bed.
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