Playing results back via DVD player to the TV

I am very new to all of this but I made a cool slide show in iPhoto and exported it to Quicktime to burn a CD. It plays well on a windows PC and of course a MAC but I thought I could also play it through my DVD player through the TV. What am I supposed to do to get results that will do that.

Most DVD players will only play DVDs. Some versatile players may be able to playback Divx files and such on DVD or CD media, but in general, you need to author a Video DVD, such as would be created with iDVD, in order to play it on a DVD player deck.

Similar Messages

  • I am trying to burn DVDs from iPhoto slideshows.  My pictures number in the hundreds and we know that iPhoto captures 99 and then "starts over".  This plays fine from the Mac Book but glitches arise on the DVD when playing it on a DVD player.  Any suggsts

    I am trying to burn DVDs from iPhoto slideshows.  My pictures number in the hundreds and we know that iPhoto captures 99 and then "starts over".  This plays fine from the Mac Book but glitches arise on the DVD when playing it on a DVD player.  Any suggestions on how to overcome the 99 "Chapter limitation" that IPhoto has?  Has anyone heard or tried an app called Vilisoft?  I read good things but I am not sure if it will do what I want.
    Jim

    Then use multipel 99 picture slideshows. 
    You can have up to 8 or 9 slideshows per menu.  If you add a sub menu reduce that by 1 and add 8 more to the sub menu.  The top menu can have links to up to 8 or so submenus (depends on the theme) and each submenu can have up to 8 or so slideshows. 
    However, converting a very large slideshow to a QT movie as Terence suggested does not envoke the 99 slide limit in iDVD.  It just becomes a single video/movie file.  So you should not have a problem with exporting at the large size, 720 x 540,
    and dragging the resulting file into the iDVD menu being sure to avoid any drop zones.
    OT

  • IMac will not play the DVD that I have made on imovie and burned on iMac SuperDrive  ?? (DVD plays fine on household DVD player and also play fine in Toshiba laptop ) Why not on the iMac - anyone know???

    iMac will not play the DVD that I have made on imovie and burned on iMac SuperDrive  ?? (DVD plays fine on household DVD player and also plays fine on Toshiba laptop ) Why not on the iMac - anyone know???

    There are many reasons this could be the case but whether an optical disc can be read or not is a function of:
    The reflective media layer of the disc
    Whether the burned disc was a DVD-R, DVD+R, DVD-RW, DVD+RW
    The brand, model, and production lot of the disc
    The specific frequency of the Write lasers that burned the disc
    The specific frequency of the Read lasers that are attempting to read the disc
    Are the Read lasers in the drive working (it is common for one set of lasers in a drive to fail while others continue to work)
    How old are the Write and Read drives (laser frequencies change with age)
    Is there dust on the read laser
    Is there dust on the read lens
    etc.
    At one time it was estimated that fewer than 80% of all burned discs were readable in 90% of the drives. That has, I believe improved over time but at the same time it seems the faillure rate of lasers in the drives has increased but that may simply be the result of how many different read and write lasers there are in today's superdrives. Fortunately todays drives are a lot less expensive the replace -- now that Apple no longer installs optical drives in their computers.

  • My husband made a DVD of our photos on his 2011 Mac desktop.    Why can't I play this on a DVD player.  I've tried 3 times and the DVD players do not recognize the format

    My husband made a DVD of our photos on his Mac desktop but I cannot play it on a DVD player.  Why?

    Drag the iDVD icon out of the Dock.  Go to the Applications folder and drag iDVD back into the dock and try to open.  If it still doesn't open try this basic troubleshooting fix :
    1 - delete the IDVD preference file, com.apple.iDVD.plist, that resides in your
    User/Home/Library/ Preferences folder.
    2 - delete IDVD'S cache file, Cache.db, that is located in your
    User/Home/Library/Caches/com.apple.iDVD folder. 
    3 - launch IDVD and try again.
    NOTE: In Lion and Mountain Lion the Home/Library folder is now invisible. To make it permanently visible enter the following in the Terminal application window: chflags nohidden ~/Library and hit the Enter button - 10.7: Un-hide the User Library folder. Once you make the library visible you'll be able to find and delete the files mentioned above.

  • Playing Photo CD on DVD Player

    Each year I burn to a CD my digital photos stored in my iPhoto albums. When I play them on a DVD player, I always get identical consecutive photos, only one of which plays/shows. The other creates a blank screen for the five seconds that each photo plays. How can I eliminate the duplicate/second photo from the CD? This glitch has always happened no matter which DVD player I use, and no matter which version of iPhoto I have used over the past 5 years (currently using v6.0.5). Can anyone explain and offer a solution?

    nedhead:
    Welcome to the Apple Discussions. I think it is the resource fork of the image file. The “resource fork” contains special instructions for the creator application or the computer’s operating system. They get included with each file. PC's don't use a resource fork and sending image files to PC results in the second file. There are applications to strip that resource fork. You can search at VersionTracker.com for "resource". One that I've used is GrimRipperCM.
    I think that should get rid of your mystery files on the Photo CD.
    Do you Twango?
    TIP: For insurance against the iPhoto database corruption that many users have experienced I recommend making a backup copy of the Library6.iPhoto database file and keep it current. If problems crop up where iPhoto suddenly can't see any photos or thinks there are no photos in the library, replacing the working Library6.iPhoto file with the backup will often get the library back. By keeping it current I mean backup after each import and/or any serious editing or work on books, slideshows, calendars, cards, etc. That insures that if a problem pops up and you do need to replace the database file, you'll retain all those efforts. It doesn't take long to make the backup and it's good insurance.
    I've written an Automator workflow application (requires Tiger), iPhoto dB file backup, that will copy the selected Library6.iPhoto file from your iPhoto Library folder to the Pictures folder, replacing any previous version of it. You can download it at Toad's Cellar. Be sure to read the Read Me pdf file.

  • Can't play Disk Image in DVD Player

    I saved my iDVD project to disk image so I could view the video on my Mac Pro prior to burning the project.
    When I double click the saved disk image icon, the archived file that I made earlier populates on the screen instead of the DVD player opening. That's strange?
    I see an Audio_TS file, Video_TS file, and a DVD-ROM contents files instead of the DVD player. Why isn't the DVD player playing the disk image that I saved?
    I also tried the process in reverse. Trying to open the saved disk image from the DVD Player and the saved disk image is all greyed out not allowing access to view the video.
    Thanks in advance for any assistance.
    Mac Pro 2.66 GHZ, 1 GB RAM, 250 GB HD Mac OS X (10.4.9) Mac Pro

    All I want to do is just play the disk image.
    Read through the following for help.
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?path=iDVD/6.0/en/18.html
    http://www.kenstone.net/fcphomepage/image_to_diskstone.html
    Once the disc image is created, double-click the .img and burn the virtual disc that should appear on your desktop, using Toast to burn the DVD. Disk Utility to burn the .img file. Usually, you can select a burning speed in Disk Utility.
    There are variations to this process based on which OS X you are using...
    Open Disk Utility (in Utilities folder in Applications folder), click on the virtual disc (maybe the .img) in the left-hand window. Click the Burn icon. A new window should drop down and your SuperDrive tray will open after clicking the Burn icon. Insert a recordable DVD. (Verbatim DVD-R preferred by me.) Click the Close button. Wait. Select a burn speed. If you hold your mouse cursor over the pop-up it says: "Select a slower speed to work around burn failures," so select 4x or slower for best results. Then click the Burn button.
    -->If the virtual disk selection won't allow you to click the Burn icon, use the .img file instead. This may have changed in 10.3.9 and did change in Tiger.
    Also, you can use DVD Player to play the virtual disk to check your iDVD project before burning to DVD. Launch DVD Player. File/Open VIDEO_TS (Open DVD Media... in Player 4.6). Find the VIDEO_TS folder and open that. (The audio folder is for DVD-Audio disks.)
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=93006
    G4 DP 1.25 GHz 2GB RAM 4 Internal Drives: 860GB   Mac OS X (10.4.9)   2 SuperDrives (SL & DL)

  • Playing slideshow on a Dvd player

    I did a few slideshows with I photo and I Dvd and it was pretty difficult to burn it on a dvd and play it on a dvd player. I change slideshow program, Fotomagico, and I have the same problem. I have a slideshow Mpeg 4, I can play it on my screen but not on my Tv with a dvd player. Do you know a format that will work for a dvd player? Which converter software can I download?

    You are not very specific about what's difficult about burning to the DVD and playing on a DVD player. Most consumer DVD players will not playback MPEG4.
    Standard Video DVDs have a very specific layout. The disc itself needs to be recorded in UDF format (which is a variation of the ISO9660 format of CD-ROMs). The disc must have a VIDEO_TS ("video title set") folder at the top level (there can also be an AUDIO_TS folder, but on DVD Video it generally doesn't have any data in it). The VIDEO_TS folder must have a collection of .IFO (title information), .VOB (video object), and .BUP (.IFO file backup) files. There must be one VIDEO_VTS.VOB, VIDEO_VTS.IFO, and VIDEO_VTS.BUP file for the disk VGM (disc title) menu, then a series of VTS_* files with the titles themselves on them.
    The .VOB files are actually multiple video (one main, the rest are alternate "angles"), audio (one or more languages, for instance), and subtitle streams multiplexed together. The video must be encoded as MPEG-2 at 9.8 Mbps or less, or MPEG-1 at 1.856 MBps or less. Permitted resolutions are 720x480, 704x480, 352x480, or 352x240 pixels at 29.97 frames per second for NTSC video (used in the USA and Canada), and 720x576, 704x576, 352x576, or 352x288 pixels at 25 frame per second for PAL/SECAM (used in the rest of the world). There are also some specific requirements on the frequency of I, P, and B-frames in the video streams, etc.
    The audio may be encoded as PCM, DTS, MP2, or AC3 -- and there are of course requirements as to the frequencies, number of channels, and bitrates permitted for each.
    The .IFO files contain information about the number of streams in the VOB, where they are, the chapter information, etc.
    When you use iDVD to create and burn a DVD, it takes care of the whole business of encoding and formatting the DVD for you to be compliant with the requirements for DVD Video. You just tell it what you want, and it encodes the video, writes the IFO data, and builds the DVD for you.
    When burning a DVD, keep in mind that slower burns result in more reliable disks, so burn the disk at the slowest possible speed. If you are going to burn several copies, and you have disk space, it's handy to simply create a DVD image file that you can burn later with Disk Utility.
    Also, keep in mind, not all set-top DVD players handle recordable media (particularly dual-layer and read/write media) very well. Some brands of recordable media are also better than others. Older DVD player may not be able to read recordable DVDs at all. Many players handle DVD+R better than DVD-R, though older players might prefer DVD-R disks.

  • I'm burning dvd's that won't play on a regular dvd player.  What am I doing wrong?  Are there some simple things to check to figure this out?  (Sorry, I know this has been asked many times)

    I'm burning dvd's that won't play on a regular dvd player.  What am I doing wrong?  They play fine on computers but not on dvd players.  Are there some simple things to check to figure this out?  (Sorry, I know this has been asked many times).  Created in DVD studio pro.

    Hi
    Just my thoughts to add to the excellent answers above.
    • BRAND of DVD used - Matters when doing Video-DVDs
    Memorex, NoName etc cheap brands usually do NOT work
    I only Use Verbatim (more organic dye in these)
    • Type of DVD - matters
    - DVD+/RW - usually results in problems
    - DL-DVDs are more problematic than SL-DVDs
    - DVD+R are a more modern sort - BUT PLAYS BADLY or not at all on older DVD-players
    I only use DVD-R
    • BURN SPEED - matters
    - Best in iDVD app - IS NOT BEST at all but results in lot's of Burn Errors = Doesn't play well or at all
    I set this down to x2 or x4 max.
    Yours Bengt W

  • Dvd plays fine in a dvd player but pixelated in Apple DVD player

    Hi,
    Thanks in advance. I have a dvd that I built/formatted in DVDSP with the default settings in place.
    It plays fine in a DVD player, but once I try playing it back with Apple DVD Player, there is one 5 minute video clip that is heavily pixelated to the point that the pixels are literally 100 times larger than a normal pixel, and these faint, broken "pixel fields" jump all over the place and the image looks incredibly "glitchy".
    Why is this happening? Does Apple DVD Player play DVDs with a different pixel aspect ratio or setup? Is there a setting for playback in a computer DVD player that I need to set upon Build/Format?
    Thanks...
    Message was edited by: leecooker
    Message was edited by: leecooker

    In DVD Player, hit Command-1 which will play your video at Actual Size. If you try to "fill the screen" it will become soft and fuzzy because you are pixel doubling (or worse).
    SD video is very low res.

  • Dual Layer Disc Does not Play in Set Top DVD Player

    Problem: Dual Layer Disc Does not Play in Set Top DVD Player
    Solution: If your burner supports having its bitsetting changed, find a utility and change it to include DVD-ROM.
    Additional Information:
    DL (Dual Layer) is currently only a +R format. This is a serious problem, as you will find that on older players - and a lot of new ones - there is no +R support. It is not official, and therefore useless for any professional application.
    By changing the bitsetting of your burner, it allows DLs (Dual Layer discs) to be burned with a book type of DVD-Rom and thus readable by many more players.
    DVD player support drops off exponentially if your burner doesn't support bitsetting, allowing you to change the book type of your disc from DL to DVD-Rom. The DL book type will play on most newer software DVD players but not set top players.
    If you've burned a dual layer disc without changing the bitsetting, it is a permanent semi-coaster as it will only play on your computer. I understand that newer DL burners are coming with firmware that automatically sets the book type.
    Encore offers no control over book-type. My understanding is that this is a burner-specific parameter: some burners support allow themselves to be set and others do not.
    Bitsetting (setting the Book Type) is specific to individual burners. There are some 3rd party software utilities out there that do a good job. The best thing to do is do a Google Search for your specific burner and find what works for yours.
    LiteOn has a book type utility available for its DL burners:
    I believe DVDInfoPro can set this on burners which support it.
    Note: I would caution everyone who updates their firmware to check their bitsetting before burning DL discs. I don't know if it always returns to its default but it did in my case.
    Bitsetting is done prior to burning the disk and generally only needs to be set once (unless like me, you update the firmware of your burner). The book type identifies to the player what type of disk is in it. Most players will play DVD-Roms with no problem. However, the book type of a DL disk is DVD+R DL as opposed to DVD-Rom and few players can read that.

    Some general comments about the OP's several questions
    Remember that reading a burned disc is not part of the original, core specification to play a DVD... so while most players do, now, they are really not required to do so to be able to play a replicated disc
    This may (probably is) even more so with dual layer discs... the disc material is different, and a player that will happily read a replicated disc may have problems with a burned disc
    There are many messages scattered in the forum, over the past several years, about brands of disc that are better... due both to overall quality control and the type of dye on the disc that is burned by the laser... with the bottom line being that not all discs are going to play in all players with 100% success
    As for studio discs... there is software out there that costs many thousands of dollars which do many (up to 9?) encoding passes to get the best, and smallest, possible result to fit more on a disc

  • I have a football game recorded on a DVD R disc that I was trying to view on my MacBook using DVD Player.  The video comes onto the screen, but immediately freezes, and then disappears.  An error message comes up saying that DVD player unexpectedly quit.

    I have a football game recorded on a DVD+R disc that I was trying to view on my MacBook using DVD Player.  The video comes onto the screen, but immediately freezes, and then disappears.  An error message comes up saying that DVD player unexpectedly quit.  My MacBook operating system is Mac OS X, version 10.5.8.  DVD Player is App version 5.0.3, framework version 5.0.7.
    However, the DVD+R works on both my Dad's and my brother's laptops.  My Dad's laptop is an iBook G4 with Mac OS X operating system, version 10.3.9.  The DVD Player is version 4.0.  My brother's laptop is a MacBook Pro with Mac OS X operating system, version 10.7.2.  The DVD Player is App version 5500.26.1 and framework version 5.5.0.  The DVD+R plays fine on their laptops, but will not play on mine.
    Anthony

    Lao Bo,
    yes, you can locate and copy a file from your HD to a USB key using UNIX commands. If you know the exact name of the file which you’re trying to locate, try this:
    find / -iname filename -print
    This command will search your entire internal disk for the particular filename. If you know that it’s within a particular user account, then you can save search time with this variation:
    find /Users/username -iname filename -print
    Either variation of this command will print all files found which have the given filename. Presuming that you’re able to identify the correct file, you can copy it to a USB key using the command
    cp -p filename_returned_by_find /Volumes/USB_volume
    If you’re not sure which volume name your USB key has, this command will show you what the possibilities are:
    ls /Volumes
    Please let me know if you have any trouble with these commands.

  • My dvds that are made from iDVD will not play in a standard dvd player. Can anyone help me?*

    I am running iDVD v 7.1.2(1158).  I used to be able to make dvds that would play in a standard dvd player.  As of today I cannot.  I do not know what has changed and I do not know what needs to be updated.  Can someone assist me?
    The dvds that I can make will play from a disk image and they can play perfectly fine in a computer but not in a standard dvd player.  I am using an external dvd burner, (The same one  have always used) to create the dvds.  I am using iDVD to author them. 
    Here is a list of my hardware.
    HL-DT-ST DVDRAM GSA-5120D:
      Firmware Revision:          A102
      Interconnect:          USB
      Burn Support:          Yes (Generic Drive Support)
      Profile Path:          None
      Cache:          2048 KB
      Reads DVD:          Yes
      CD-Write:          -R, -RW
      DVD-Write:          -R, -RAM, -RW, +R, +R DL, +RW
      Write Strategies:          CD-TAO, CD-SAO, CD-Raw, DVD-DAO
      Media:          To show the available burn speeds, insert a disc and choose View > Refresh
    iDVD:
      Version:          7.1.2
      Last Modified:          7/19/11 8:19 PM
      Kind:          Intel
      64-Bit (Intel):          No
      Get Info String:          iDVD 7.1.2, Copyright © 2001-2011 Apple Inc. All rights reserved.
      Location:          /Applications/iDVD.app
    Can anyone help me?  The dvds are not even detected

    • Material used: Video-Codec and Photo file format and Audio file format - matters too. I use
    - Video - StreamingDV .dv or AIC
    - Photos as .jpg (only)
    - Audio as .aiff 16bit 44.1kHz or 48kHz (ONLY - never .mp3 or directly from iTunes - all converted to .aiff first)
    With this I do not mean any setting in iDVD - BUT the raw material used in iMovie / FinalCut / Avid 100 / Adobe Premiere
    As this usually matters - later in iDVD
    How did You Export from Video-editing program used ? I prefer
    • iMovie HD6 - just drop the movie project icon (NOT iMovie Icon - the PROJECT one) over into iDVD big menu window (avoiding - drop-zones as they are for other tasks)
    • iMovie'08 to '11 - Share to MEDIA BROWSER - AND AS MEDIUM - not HD or other resolution as iDVD does a bad downscaling job.
    • iMovie'13 (version 10.0.x) - Share as 480p - Import this into iDVD
    • FinalCut (Pro or Express) - Export as QuickTime .mov - NO QUICKTIME CONVERSION - IMPORTANT
    • Adobe Premiere - I don't know - not tested Yet
    • Avid 100 - I don't know - not tested Yet
    Cleaning the DVD-burner - If it Burns DVDs OK then that's may be not the problem - But if it only burns CDs OK then either the DVD-burning-laser is dirty or broken.
    It is very easy to kill this DVD-laser as it over-heats if one burns several DVDs in a row. I only burn three at a time - then let it cool down for 30 minutes till next batch of three DVDs.
    Yours Bengt W

  • Is there a BluRay DVD player for the HP HDX 9010nr?

    Is there a BluRay DVD player for the HP HDX 9010nr?
    This question was solved.
    View Solution.

    All laptop drives are a standard size and any SATA Blu-ray drive will fit. Remove the rear mount and bezel from you old one and mount it on the new one.
     Here is a thread where the guy has done the same thing, Huffer has provided a video. It talks about a Dell and it's a little long, but it does eventually get to the part where the front bezel's are change out.
     http://h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Notebook-Hardware/Rem​ove-black-silver-bezel-from-optical-drive/td-p/605​...
     This is one from e-bay that will work.
     http://cgi.ebay.com/Samsung-Blu-ray-BD-ROM-8x-DVD-​RW-Laptop-SATA-Drive-New-/370491248810?pt=PCC_Driv​...
     It has been reported that the Sony Blu-ray drives are giving problems, but after reading some of these threads, it sounds more like a software problem.
     When you install the drive and boot up, Windows will automatically install the driver(s) for you. HP Media Smart DVD is the only Blu-ray playing software that HP has to offer and it can be problematic.
     I would recommend to buy some third party software form ArcSoft or Cyberlink. Keep in mind that Cyberlink makes the software for HP, so if you have problems with MS DVD then they may occur with Cyberlink. You can always use their trial first.
     Here is a link to MS DVD, I use this on in my dv8 and it will (should) work in your Dragon.
     http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/softwareDownloa​dIndex?softwareitem=ob-87326-1&lc=en&dlc=en&cc=us&​...
     Save it to the desk top and install it from there, not from a temporary folder. If you are using Commodo Fire Wall and/or AVG anti virus software, these have to be disabled before downloading and installing MS DVD.
     If you have problems installing MS DVD, post again and there is trick to get it to install.

  • Playing midi back via Roland TD30 Module.....

    I can record my drum parts into Garageband via midi no problem at all....
    What I would like to do is to play them back via the module not the inbuilt GarageBand sounds....
    Is this possible and if so how doI do it?
    If not, what software would let me do this?
    Many thanks!!
    Using Macbook Pro with Garageband Version 10.0.2 Roland TD30 Drum Module and Roland UM One Interface
    OS is right uptodate

    A little bit of pre-configuring will allow you to do the things you need effectively.
    I'd suggest if you haven't already to open an environment window and create a new Multi-Instrument. Name it Triton and set it to the MIDI port it's connected to your computer on, and click in each of the 16 sub-channels in the multi-instrument to enable all 16 MIDI channels for the Triton.
    Now, back in the arrange page, create 16 tracks and assign each to subsequent Triton MIDI channels (quickest way to do this is in the top track, click-hold it and select "Triton -> Triton 1" to assign the first Triton MIDI channel to that track, then bang the "Create Track with Next Instrument" 15 times to easily create that. Save it as a template so it's always available, or maybe as your autoload song.
    Now, either load a MIDI file and choose the copy the current environment config for it, or drag the MIDI file to the arrange page.

  • How to export HD footage to play on a standard DVD player

    Hi
    Sorry, I am very new, but very excited about learning more about cs4. I am thinking to buy a HD video camera. Does CS4 easily convert HD footage at the dvd burning stage to then play on a regular dvd player. I understand it will mean downgrading to SD - but I am thinking about all the people I will give dvds to for them to watch. Or should I just get a camera that films in both HD and SD

    Let me give you an optimum example of my last HD to DVD timing.  The video was shot with two cameras under good lighting conditions and there was very little color correction required and only a few special effects.  The finished video was 39 minutes (1.35 GB).  The AME encoding time on my 8 core (2.33 GHz) with a really fast RAID 0 array was 36 minutes 48 seconds!  If you start adding in a lot of color correction and lots of other effects encoding time does increase significantly. I am convinced that the DVD was of much better quality that had we shot it in SD.  I have had problem shoots (lighting) that required vast amount of color correction etc. that required many hours of MPEG2 DVD encoding.
    Incidentlly I do not export from Premiere (which uses the new copy of the Project on your C:drive), I close Premiere and open AME and use the much faster true project file on my RAID 0 array.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Ajuda - Planejamento de Projeto

    All, Estou em um cliente e surgiu a seguinte necessidade: Existe um projeto que deve ser feito dentro de 4 meses, e dentro desse período há fases que devem ser cumpridas dentro de um prazo determinado Ex.: - Emitir requisição em até 15 dias - Emitir

  • How the JVM SHOULD be distributed (interesting)

    Well I sent this document to the JCP maybe it will be better off there.... Sun needs a new JAVA marketing strategy. Opinions expressed here are of my own, Matt Prokes, remember these are only opinions about what should or could be. If you have ?'s co

  • How do i sync Notes from 4 to 4S or to itunes

    how do i sync Notes from 4 to 4S or to Itunes?

  • Looking for a C compiler

    hi For my course work, I am looking for a freeware C compiler for my Mac laptop (OS 10.6.4). Which C compiler should I use? Prefer to have a GUI I am a newbie to Mac regards

  • Urgent..ADF 11g Getting selected Checkbox values..

    Hi, I am working on 11g ADF form.One of the requirement is like this: User will select multiple rows and click on "Assign" button and pop-up window will open with some fields. How can i pass the selected rows values to the pop-up window? It would be