Or get an AppleTV or LaCie LaCinema or something that can play video from a hard drive or from your Mac so you don't have to squeeze so much onto a disc. What I believe you should do instead is consider creating DivX DVDs and play them on a DivX-equipped DVD player. It then needs to be authored into a VIDEO_TS folder which Toast can do as part of burning a video DVD. I believe ffmpegX is popular for this as is MPEG2 Works. Whether self-hosted, implemented in Sitecore Managed Cloud, or used as Experience Manager (XM) through Sitecore Experience Manager Cloud (XM Cloud), the 10.3 release improves how organizations extend and integrate the Sitecore Experience Platform (SXP) with other applications in their marketing tech stack. You need to use an MPEG 2 encoder where you can set the bit rate yourself and encode the audio tracks to either AC-3 or MPEG audio. It is possible to put 10 hours of video on a dual-layer video DVD but not with iDVD. iDVD simply cannot put more content on a DVD then it tells you it can. Ten hours of just the audio will take up about 3/4ths of the space on a dual-layer disc leaving a very tiny amount of room for the video. Also, iDVD only uses uncompressed PCM audio which takes up a lot of disc space. IDVD has an absolute minimum encoding bit rate that determines the absolute maximum length of video it can fit on a single- or dual-layer DVD. libavcodec, from the ffmpeg project, along with code from the old FFusion component: MS-MPEG4 v1 & v2 DivX 3ivx H. I'm writing all this in the hopes that anyone might jump in with a suggestion. Perian aims to provide a single package for all your playback needs. And it worked, but the quality does not compare to the Visual Hub 6 hour disc. I got around the "exceeds max." problem by doing what I said before - I lied to iDVD and said it was dual layer disc. Hence, the current problem ("project exceeds maximum content duration.") Keep in mind, all I added to what Visual Hub produced was a bare bones menu, using a modified theme from iDVD. iso file (which contains a VIDEO_TS AND AUDIO_TS folder) then create a menu for the 6 shows and burn it all in either iDVD or Toast. That's when I tried taking the finished Visual Hub. It does separate the 6 tv shows into chapters, and you can jump to them, but for anyone who doesn't know what's there, they won't know till they get there. The problem with using Visual Hub is that I could not figure a way to include some kind of menu. Remarkable really, considering it was 6 hours of video. When I did this using justĪuthor DVD, then burned that to a disc, the quality was very good.
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