All of these sizes should fit my verbatim discs no problem but it would appear Nero adds to it somewhow and makes the recode bigger. Is there another program i can use to manually compress the AVI down to just mb?
Nero Vision is for AVIs. You must log in or sign up to reply here. Show Ignored Content. Share This Page Tweet. Your name or email address: Do you already have an account? No, create an account now. At the other end of the spectrum, the same discs might accommodate as much as nine hours and three hours respectively of VHS quality material.
Not all computer video and audio encoding systems, authoring software and consumer electronics CE recorders offer access to all DVD-Video features or support all degrees of compression. Thus, in practice, different products offer a range of possible recording times.
For example, an entry-level DVD-Video authoring software package might support only limited features and permit only one hour of recording using as little compression as possible to keep the quality of the final result as high as possible. Mid-range and professional hardware and software tools provide the greatest degree of freedom while consumer products generally offer the least. Generally speaking, consumer electronics CE recorders have a variety of automatic or manual recording modes typically ranging from one to four hours occasionally six to eight hours per 4.
Although manufacturers sometimes use language such as High Quality HQ , Standard Play SP , Long Play LP and others to describe the recording time of their products, be aware that there are no broadly accepted industry standards for the use of such terminology. Type 8 2. Type 7 1. Type 1 2. Type 1 5. Type 2 2. Type 4 5. There is a DVD5 disc, which is a single layer disc, DVD10 is a double sided disc with a single data layer on each side of the disc disc flipping is required , DVD9 is a two data layer disc readable from the same side no disc flipping required , and finally DVD18 which has two data layers on each side of the disc.
Note that the dual layer disc is not double the single layer capacity due to some capacity loss in order to make the dual data layer technology work. Now to answer your question, the problem rests in the use of terminology when it comes to DVDs. All DVD-Rs that are single data layer state a capacity of 4. Unfortunately, GB does not refer to gigabytes like for the size of files, but rather to billions of bytes or G bytes. When talking about computer storage it is not SI units that are used but rather binary units.
Binary units use multiples of 2 rather than Therefore, stated capacity of a single layer DVD-R is 4. The calculation is 4,,, divided by 1,,, The file capacity is 4. It basically has nothing to do with the type of disc used, recorder, or software for burning.
0コメント