Thanks.Why does burning software ask you if you want to burn an image when you want to burn a video?The software burns an IMAGE of the DVD to a specified location on your computer. It does this to syncronise sound and audio among other things. When it is completed, you double click on the image, it should then burn onto the empty DVD in the drive. Be patient, burning the image can sometimes take just as long as burning the disc. Hope this helps.Why does burning software ask you if you want to burn an image when you want to burn a video?because of buffer under run technology. if you are copying a disc "on the fly" without an image that is to say, and your buffer runs out the disc will not work. if you first make an image of the disc it will be much faster for you computer to read the image than it would be to read a rom drive then write to the burner. reading an image is quicker because there is no drive that has to spin and be read. your pc just reads what is in the ram memory of your puter. this means the buffer stays full at all times so it doesnt run out.
Sunday, February 12, 2012
Why does burning software ask you if you want to burn an image when you want to burn a video?
Some people suggested lots of different software to burn a video onto a DVD. Non of them work! They only ask me if I want to burn a file or an image. Why would you want to burn an image to a DVD?
Thanks.Why does burning software ask you if you want to burn an image when you want to burn a video?The software burns an IMAGE of the DVD to a specified location on your computer. It does this to syncronise sound and audio among other things. When it is completed, you double click on the image, it should then burn onto the empty DVD in the drive. Be patient, burning the image can sometimes take just as long as burning the disc. Hope this helps.Why does burning software ask you if you want to burn an image when you want to burn a video?because of buffer under run technology. if you are copying a disc "on the fly" without an image that is to say, and your buffer runs out the disc will not work. if you first make an image of the disc it will be much faster for you computer to read the image than it would be to read a rom drive then write to the burner. reading an image is quicker because there is no drive that has to spin and be read. your pc just reads what is in the ram memory of your puter. this means the buffer stays full at all times so it doesnt run out.xenon xenon
Thanks.Why does burning software ask you if you want to burn an image when you want to burn a video?The software burns an IMAGE of the DVD to a specified location on your computer. It does this to syncronise sound and audio among other things. When it is completed, you double click on the image, it should then burn onto the empty DVD in the drive. Be patient, burning the image can sometimes take just as long as burning the disc. Hope this helps.Why does burning software ask you if you want to burn an image when you want to burn a video?because of buffer under run technology. if you are copying a disc "on the fly" without an image that is to say, and your buffer runs out the disc will not work. if you first make an image of the disc it will be much faster for you computer to read the image than it would be to read a rom drive then write to the burner. reading an image is quicker because there is no drive that has to spin and be read. your pc just reads what is in the ram memory of your puter. this means the buffer stays full at all times so it doesnt run out.
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