From: Woody on 1 Aug 2010 07:29 Rowland McDonnell <real-address-in-sig(a)flur.bltigibbet.invalid> wrote: > Ian McCall <ian(a)eruvia.org> wrote: > >> real-address-in-sig(a)flur.bltigibbet.invalid (Rowland McDonnell) said: >> >>> D.M. Procida <real-not-anti-spam-address(a)apple-juice.co.uk> wrote: >>> >>>> What's the best way to achieve this? I don't think it can be done > > > > in the >>>> Finder, because the files need to be in the right order and the Mac > > > > does >>>> in alphabetically (which turns out to be wrong). >>> >>> DVDRemaster does it for me. >> >> There's the freebie Burn too: >> <http://burn-osx.sourceforge.net/Pages/English/home.html> > > Hmm. > > I had that one - sat there on disc, ready to use. How come I never > have > done? > > Anyone else got that problem? Software that you fetch when you hear > about it, installed for `as and when I need to do what it does', then > promptly forgotten about? A large amount of it. Especially software bought in a bundle -- Woody
From: Stimpy on 1 Aug 2010 07:51 On Sat, 31 Jul 2010 20:48:07 +0100, D.M. Procida wrote > What's the best way to achieve this? I don't think it can be done in the > Finder, because the files need to be in the right order and the Mac does > in alphabetically (which turns out to be wrong). > I use DVD2ONE, seems dead reliable
From: David Paste on 1 Aug 2010 19:09 On 31 July, 22:58, demp...(a)actrix.gen.nz (David Empson) wrote: > The VIDEO_TS folder must be placed at the top level of the DVD, and thre > should be an empty AUDIO_TS folder alongside it. Just out of interest, what is the purpose of the empty AUDIO_TS folder?
From: David Empson on 1 Aug 2010 22:40 David Paste <pastedavid(a)gmail.com> wrote: > On 31 July, 22:58, demp...(a)actrix.gen.nz (David Empson) wrote: > > > The VIDEO_TS folder must be placed at the top level of the DVD, and thre > > should be an empty AUDIO_TS folder alongside it. > > Just out of interest, what is the purpose of the empty AUDIO_TS folder? Some devices expect it to be there. It is actually the folder in which DVD-Audio content would go, but it is normally empty for a DVD-Video disc. It is possible for a single disc to have both DVD-Video and DVD-Audio content, but DVD-Audio is rare enough that I've never paid any attention to it. -- David Empson dempson(a)actrix.gen.nz
From: Martin S Taylor on 2 Aug 2010 04:50
Rowland McDonnell wrote > Seriously - what's the benefit in paying out all that loot? What do you > get that MacOS X disc burning plus what you get with cheaper/free third > party software that makes Toast worth all that money? Hybrid disks. They appear as two disks on your desktop - one with data, one an audio CD. I don't think any other software does this. MST |