A *possible* workaround *might* be to see if Apeaksoft DVD Creator will create a DVD-9 using your video, then use the free DVD Shrink to get it down to the DVD-5 limit. Bear in mind that most software using ffmpeg does not automatically encode mpg2 with VBR, which increases the file size quite a bit. If the video's too long, Apeaksoft DVD Creator may not be using a low enough bit rate, may not be able to lower the bit rate enough, because at a certain point the quality drops so low, it might hit a hard coded cutoff. Regardless the current file size, the DVD video version will likely use much less compression, & possibly have a larger frame size too, so the file will probably be Much larger. What's important with DVDs is the length of the video, the amount of video compression applied, & the size of the audio file, which depends on length & format. "I can't burn a 379MB Real Player video to a 4.7GB DVD."ĭVDs use mpg2 video - the spec includes encoder settings for max player compatibility, the standard DVD video frame size, & a few audio formats.
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