I have a Kodak V530 digital camera where I am able to record video/sound.. I am wanting to transfer all the videos that I have taken with my digital camera (and are now stored on my hard drive) and burn them onto a DVD-RW to give to some family.
*I do have a dvd burner and my computer came with sonic my dvd* But whenever I try to start a burn I get an error message saying could not stream...Help please!!!! which program do you use??.
if not NERO, then you should.
Nero Smart is the best burning program I worked with.
it's easy if you have it, (it's usually bundled with the DVD ROM).
Do you want to burn the files to the disk so other view them on their computer??, If So then it's just that you have to specify DVD on the top drop down list, then go to "make Data DVD", in your program's data aria, then add the files.
Or if you want to make them as a DVD Movie, then you have to go to "Photo and Video", and then "Make your own DVD-Video", add the files.
I don't think that Nero would do the problem "error" you're having, If so, Then You have to uninstall the program and reinstall it again, and make sure you install it in a different directory, than the last one, cause the computer will save some files from the previous installation on the hard disk.
If this doesn't fix the problem, Let me know??.
I can come up with some other solution for you.. I have not used My DVD so I can't help with your problem with that particular piece of software, but If you are using a PC with Windows XP, you might consider using Windows Movie Maker which should already be installed on your computer. Movie Maker will allow you to combine digital video, digital still and sound files which can be recorded on a CD-r or CD-RW. These disks should be playable in most DVD players and on another computer.
Since most video taken with a digital still camera are relatively short, the CD format (rather than a DVD) would be quite appropriate. Make sure you turn off all programs in the background as they will slow the system down.
Lower your burning rate to 1x
Consider using DVD-R instead of RW
Change software
Create an image file first if possible.
You may have to convert the Kodak files into more suitable MP2 files. |