I finished a video of my daughter's choir tour through Oregon last summer, and just finished delivering DVD versions to choir families. Total video time was close to 100 minutes. Edited with Vegas Video (duh), authored with DVD Wise (powerful but with a rather crude User Interface), audio encoded with SoftEncode (AC-3). Bitrate was about 6.2Mb/sec and was compressed VBR via Cinemacraft. The whole project came in at 4.34GB, just under the 4.37GB limit. I didn't plan to have it that close; that's just how it worked out after throwing in some extra bonus material.
So far I've burned 30 DVD-R disks (Fujifilm 2X)in a Pioneer -04 drive and have applied labels (Meritline) using a Stomper tool. The labels were printed with an Epson C80 and the results were stunning. To my relief, every disk burned fine, even burning so close to the capacity limits.
Here's how the DVDs have fared so far: two users could not play them at all. I went to their homes and tried a non-label DVD-R, a different brand DVD-R, and two brands of DVD-RW. Nothing. I think one player was a 2-year-old Sony, and the other a Toshiba about 1 year old.
In my own home, we now have three players. The fancy one, a year-old progressive-scan Toshiba, will only play an unlabeled DVD-R or DVD-RW version. The other two units, however, are cheap models bought in the past month. They will play ANYTHING, label or not.
Intrigued, I took a couple of my DVD-R disks to Fry's Electronics and tried playing them on various players. All the floor units worked well. I then went into the demo rooms in the back, where the high-end stuff is kept. Three rooms, three different DVD players, and all three never even recognized the disks!
I have no doubt that, two years from now, every player will play anything, but for the moment, I am bemused that the fancy players are being clobbered by the cheap Apex units coming from China. I'll bet Apex already has a 25% market share.
So far I've burned 30 DVD-R disks (Fujifilm 2X)in a Pioneer -04 drive and have applied labels (Meritline) using a Stomper tool. The labels were printed with an Epson C80 and the results were stunning. To my relief, every disk burned fine, even burning so close to the capacity limits.
Here's how the DVDs have fared so far: two users could not play them at all. I went to their homes and tried a non-label DVD-R, a different brand DVD-R, and two brands of DVD-RW. Nothing. I think one player was a 2-year-old Sony, and the other a Toshiba about 1 year old.
In my own home, we now have three players. The fancy one, a year-old progressive-scan Toshiba, will only play an unlabeled DVD-R or DVD-RW version. The other two units, however, are cheap models bought in the past month. They will play ANYTHING, label or not.
Intrigued, I took a couple of my DVD-R disks to Fry's Electronics and tried playing them on various players. All the floor units worked well. I then went into the demo rooms in the back, where the high-end stuff is kept. Three rooms, three different DVD players, and all three never even recognized the disks!
I have no doubt that, two years from now, every player will play anything, but for the moment, I am bemused that the fancy players are being clobbered by the cheap Apex units coming from China. I'll bet Apex already has a 25% market share.