Wednesday, August 19, 2009

How do you get invited to YOUTUBE?

DVD players with MPEG-4/DivX/XviD support will display a list of the files on a data disc, so you can just burn the file to a DVD.
Embedded videos (videos that appear inside the Web browser window), are more difficult to capture than a video that opens up in a standalone video player because the actual Web URL/link to the video might not be simple to locate in the Web page.
I'm not aware of a simple all-in-one package that makes it easy to do this because, legally, it may not be allowed.

Learn different compression of MPEG and choose the best tool.


You will most likely need several different tools to do the conversion. Another possible method would be a screen capture utility. There are freeware, shareware and commercial tools that can record screen activity to a video file. Unless you wanted to include the desktop in the video, you would need to crop the video (there may be a program that will let you record a single window).
The exact method varies depending on if it's in Windows, Macs and Linux, but Google for the keywords "transcode Flash Video" and you should be able to narrow down the steps for your particular setup.

The popular ways to play h.264 video after you have converterd DVD to H.264 or other video to h.264.


Hope it helps.
make sure it's a blank dvd. put the disk in and click something similar to "open folders" then get your youtube video files and just copy and past via drag and drop.
Good luck!
Same type of media, but the disc contains a table of contents and a navigation menu. Software from Nero, Roxio, Ulead, Pinnacle and many others can author DVD-Video discs.

Video knowledge center provides information about videos as much as possible for your reference, including video formats, video codecs, video playing, video conversion.


Video's on YouTube are in Flash Video format. It's possible to stream that to a file and transcode it to MPEG-2 format.
For the video to be playable on the average DVD player, it will have to be authored as a "DVD-Video" disc.

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