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Can I put DVD-Video content on a CD-R or CD-RW?

CD-R CD-RW content DVD-Video
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Can I put DVD-Video content on a CD-R or CD-RW?

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Obviously there are advantages to recording a DVD-Video volume on inexpensive recordable CD rather than expensive recordable DVD. It would be perfect for testing and for short video programs. Unfortunately, you can put DVD-Video files on CD-R or CD-RW media but you’ll have a hard time finding a player that can play the disc. The Philips DVD170 industrial player seems to be the only player that can play DVD-Video content from CD-R and CD-RW discs. The Pioneer DVD-V7200 industrial player can play DVD-Video from CD-RW, but not CD-R. In all cases, the disc must be formatted with the UDF file system in accordance with the DVD-Video spec. Computers are more forgiving. DVD-Video files on CD-R or CD-RW, with or without UDF, will play back on any DVD-ROM PC as long as the drive can read recordable media (all but early models can). An alternative is to put Video CD content on CD-R or CD-RW media for playback in a DVD player.

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[Note: This section refers to creating original DVD-Video content, not copying from DVD to CD. The latter is impractical, since it takes 7 to 14 CDs to hold one side of a DVD. Also, most DVD movies are encrypted so that the files can’t be copied without special software.] There are many advantages to creating a DVD-Video volume using inexpensive recordable CD rather than expensive recordable DVD. The resulting “MiniDVD” is perfect for testing and for short video programs. Unfortunately, you can put DVD-Video files on CD-R or CD-RW media, or even on pressed CD-ROM media, but as yet there is no settop player that can play the disc. There are a number of reasons DVD-Video players can’t play DVD-Video content from CD media: 1) checking for CD media is a fallback case after DVD focus fails, at which point the players are no longer looking for DVD-Video content 2) it’s simpler and cheaper for players to spin CDs at 1x speed rather than the 9x speed required for DVD-Video content 3) many play

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[Note: This section refers to creating original DVD-Video content, not copying from DVD to CD. The latter is impractical, since it takes 7 to 14 CDs to hold one side of a DVD. Also, most DVD movies are encrypted so that the files can’t be copied without special software.] There are many advantages to creating a DVD-Video volume using inexpensive recordable CD rather than expensive recordable DVD. The resulting “cDVD” (also called a “miniDVD”) is perfect for testing and for short video programs. Unfortunately, you can put DVD-Video files on CD-R or CD-RW media, or even on pressed CD-ROM media, but as yet almost no settop player can play the disc.

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[Note: This section refers to creating original DVD-Video content, not copying from DVD to CD. The latter is impractical, since it takes 7 to 14 CDs to hold one side of a DVD. Also, most DVD movies are encrypted so that the files can’t be copied without special software.] There are many advantages to creating a DVD-Video volume using inexpensive recordable CD rather than expensive recordable DVD. The resulting “MiniDVD” is perfect for testing and for short video programs. Unfortunately, you can put DVD-Video files on CD-R or CD-RW media but as yet there is no settop player that can play the disc.

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[Note: This section refers to creating original DVD-Video content, not copying from DVD to CD. The latter is impractical, since it takes 7 to 14 CDs to hold one side of a DVD. Also, most DVD movies are encrypted so that the files can’t be copied without special software.] There are many advantages to creating a DVD-Video volume using inexpensive recordable CD rather than expensive recordable DVD. The resulting “cDVD” (sometimes called a “miniDVD”) is perfect for testing and for short video programs. Unfortunately, you can put DVD-Video files on CD-R or CD-RW media, or even on pressed CD-ROM media, but almost no set-top player can play the disc. There are a number of reasons DVD-Video players can’t play DVD-Video content from CD media: 1) checking for CD media is a fallback case after DVD focus fails, at which point the players are no longer looking for DVD-Video content 2) it’s simpler and cheaper for players to spin CDs at 1x speed rather than the 9x speed required for DVD-Video conte

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