Burning movies to CDR or CDRW....

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  • kentodd
    Junior Member
    Junior Member
    • Mar 2003
    • 16

    Burning movies to CDR or CDRW....

    Most movies are usually 650 to 750 MB in size with the majority
    over 700 MB.
    My goal is to burn movies to CDR or CDRW since I'm still waiting
    for DVD burner prices to come down...
    As I understand it a CDR can hold 700 MB.
    This is where it gets confusing...
    Try the following...
    - Open a folder you keep your movies in...
    - Next to the files it shows the file size...
    - Now R-Click a file and select properties...
    - This shows 2 different sizes...
    The one in ( ) is different than the first.
    - Now...move the 'properties' window out of the way and look
    at the file size listed for that same file in the folder...
    - THREE DIFFERENT SIZES!!!

    Which one do I go by to see if it's gonna fit on a CDR???
    And if the actual file size is slightly over 700MB, is there any way
    to squeeze it on to one cd? Or will I HAVE to use 2 cds to burn
    one movie?
    I keep all my new stuff on my hard drive for file sharing, but
    after the new wears off, I want my disk space back!

    Movieman

    ...feed my brain...


    p.s. How do I change my username?
  • setarip
    Retired
    • Dec 2001
    • 24955

    #2
    The smallest number is the actual number of bytes/Megs in the file itself...

    Comment

    • andrewpk200
      Junior Member
      Junior Member
      • Mar 2003
      • 45

      #3
      Right,
      dunno about you but i am running XP, in that the file size in () is the amount of bytes used where as the the other figure is the SAME amount but in MB, or GB if it is big enough
      the size below that related to the amount of space it uses on the harddrive,

      the easiest way to make sure it will fit on a cd is to use nero, it has a progress bar at the bottom of the main window showing how much space there is left on the cd
      The Power of a Goldfish Should never be underestimated

      Comment

      • kentodd
        Junior Member
        Junior Member
        • Mar 2003
        • 16

        #4
        Link please...

        Please gimme a link where I can d/l nero...

        It would be nice if ripping/compression programs (which I know
        squat about) had a setting to yield a file of 700MB maximum.
        I'd be glad the give up the tad of quality that shaving
        10 to 40 kb would cost so it would fit on a CDR!!
        Idealy I need to cough up $300 for a DVD burner but I'm gonna
        wait till they get around $200.


        Q: How complicated would it be to, lets say, chop off the credits
        at the end which might be enough in most cases to knock
        the file size down to less that 700MB?
        By the way I have zero experience in video editing...
        I've read that video editing can require some 'muscle
        under the hood'...I have a 1.6 P4 Dell w/ 512MB DDR
        and an ancient GeForce2 64MB MX400 AGP graphics card.
        Zat enuff??

        Comment

        • setarip
          Retired
          • Dec 2001
          • 24955

          #5
          "Q: How complicated would it be to, lets say, chop off the credits
          at the end which might be enough in most cases to knock
          the file size down to less that 700MB?"


          Not difficult at all.


          Cutting with VirtualDub (or any of its variants):


          1)Load your original (DivX-compressed or otherwise) .AVI into VirtualDub
          2) Set BOTH "Video" and "Audio" to "Direct Stream Copying"
          3) Move slider to the starting point of the scene you wish to delete
          4) From the "Edit" dropdown menu, select "Go to next keyframe"
          5) From the "Edit" dropdown menu, select "Set Selection Start"
          6) Move slider to the ending point of the scene you wish to delete
          7) From the "Edit" dropdown menu, select "Go to next keyframe"
          8) From the "Edit" dropdown menu, select "Set Selection End'
          9) From the "Edit" dropdown menu, select "Delete frames"
          10) Save with a new filename

          Comment

          • kentodd
            Junior Member
            Junior Member
            • Mar 2003
            • 16

            #6
            Kool...

            Thanx for the crash course...
            I figured out where to get nero and virtualdub...duh....
            Pardon the brain fart...
            Does this work only with .avi files? MPEG too?

            Thanx Again...

            Comment

            • Deus
              Super Member
              Super Member
              • Nov 2001
              • 284

              #7
              Yea contrary to popular belief a kb is not exactly 1000 bites, a mb is not exactly 1000 kb, and so on. Thats why file sizes telling the total number of bites might be different from other measurements.

              Comment

              • setarip
                Retired
                • Dec 2001
                • 24955

                #8
                "Does this work only with .avi files?"

                Yes.

                For MPEG files, try MPEGCutter v.1.0.5 ("MPEG2CUT.EXE") - it's blazingly fast and easy to use...

                Comment

                • SKD_Tech
                  Lord of Digital Video
                  Lord of Digital Video
                  • Jan 2003
                  • 1512

                  #9
                  1024bytes = 1KB
                  1024 KB = 1 MB

                  I am pretty sure that is right

                  Comment

                  • Deus
                    Super Member
                    Super Member
                    • Nov 2001
                    • 284

                    #10
                    Ya and in binary

                    10010010 = 1 byte

                    and 1 digit of that = a bit

                    Comment

                    • pops
                      Junior Member
                      Junior Member
                      • Feb 2003
                      • 8

                      #11
                      I'm gonna try and explain the kb issue and perhaps confuse you guys even more.

                      1 KB = 2^10 bit = 1024 bit
                      1 MB = 1 MiB = 2^20 B = 1 048 576 B
                      1 GB = 1 GiB = 2^30 B = 1 073 741 824 B

                      That is how most people and software use the different units although new standard has been aproved.

                      Check this link out for more useful info

                      Comment

                      • kentodd
                        Junior Member
                        Junior Member
                        • Mar 2003
                        • 16

                        #12
                        Givin' me flashbacks...

                        SKD...I think you reactivated some dormant brain cells of mine.
                        If I would have thought back to my college daze, I waz well
                        versed in binary, hex-decimal (aka 'machine code' 0-9, A-F, which is what all instruction code is coverted to for execution) and Boolean logic (digital by nature). It's been a while...
                        My 1st. computer was called the Challenger C1P by a company
                        called Ohio Scientific Inc. (OSI), it boasted a massive 8K of
                        memory and used a portable cassette player as it's only storage
                        device, ('80-'81), later came the infamous Commodore 64 with
                        a 300bps modem, 1200bps for $150 more.
                        When I graduated college the IBM XT 386 w/ a 80 meg. hard
                        drive (8088 CPU) was considered THE hot rod of the time.
                        All this makes me sound old...I'M ONLY 31!!
                        "Blink and you'll miss it!"

                        Comment

                        • cypher007
                          Gold Member
                          Gold Member
                          • May 2002
                          • 116

                          #13
                          your biography

                          your biography sounds alot like mine im also 31. i had a secondhand zx80 which had been upgraded to a 81. then had a brand new zx spectrum 48k. then had a secondhand c64. then a brand new amiga 500. then a brand new cd32. then a secondhand 1200. then i built my first pc a amd k5-166 with 32mg and a 1gb harddrive back in 1997.
                          Intel Quad Q6600@3000
                          water cooled
                          2gb ram
                          160gb 2xseagate sata raid 0
                          gforce 8800GTS 512mb

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