0
I have several .mp4 files ranging from say 500 MB to 1.5 GB.
After doing some reading, I learned that these .mp4 files will take even more space on DVD (playable on DVD-player), if I don't want to compromise on quality. How can I know in advance how much each of these files would take on DVD so that I can plan accordingly (like what files should be grouped up etc)?
Also, I was playing around with DVD Flick (but I heard it has audio/video sync issues), and I could not determine proper bitrate. I felt odd selecting Target Bitrate as Auto-fit, because that would mean quality loss. How should I select target bitrate?
Any DVD burner (from mp4) (freeware) you recommend?
1Check your DVD player to see if it can play video files (eg look in the manual for “DivX”, “MP4”, etc.) If it can, then Michael is correct and it would be easier to just burn the video files to a disc instead of converting them (assuming that you don’t need it to be playable on all DVD players). – Synetech – 2011-07-08T07:25:17.417
1I can not assume that DVD player can play MP4. – TPR – 2011-07-08T07:32:43.583
Okay then if you must convert to MPEG2, you should consider running an analysis pass on the videos to collect bitrate distribution so that you can get the best possible quality across the video when you run the encoding pass. If you have several videos from 500-1,536MB (ie, the disc is almost full with compressed videos, then you will not be able to fit them on a single DVD5 in MPEG2 format, so you’ll have to accept quality loss during the conversion. There are plenty of tools that can analyse a video to give you extensive information like bitrates, which you can then use as the input. – Synetech – 2011-07-09T19:33:48.177