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Recording from Youtube to dvd disc
abigail1234
Posts: 1,292
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I'm not sure if this is the right place to ask this question but here goes!
I want to record a 30-minute Youtube video onto dvd and watch it on a TV. It's a training video but the person's TV isn't a smart TV and doesn't have access to youtube. He does have a TV and a dvd player though!
I downloaded the video and tried to burn it onto disc using Express Burn Plus (NCH Software) but it stopped burning halfway despite several attempts. I had better luck with Win X DVD Authour but the disc plays very badly, stopping or breaking up so completely unsuitable for a training session!
Do you have any suggestions of things that have worked for you? There was a suggestion of recording onto Pendrive and using a projector but I'd prefer to keep things simple and uncluttered if I can (plus, that's another thing I have to learn to do!)
I'm a non-techie so please be gentle! Thank you
I want to record a 30-minute Youtube video onto dvd and watch it on a TV. It's a training video but the person's TV isn't a smart TV and doesn't have access to youtube. He does have a TV and a dvd player though!
I downloaded the video and tried to burn it onto disc using Express Burn Plus (NCH Software) but it stopped burning halfway despite several attempts. I had better luck with Win X DVD Authour but the disc plays very badly, stopping or breaking up so completely unsuitable for a training session!
Do you have any suggestions of things that have worked for you? There was a suggestion of recording onto Pendrive and using a projector but I'd prefer to keep things simple and uncluttered if I can (plus, that's another thing I have to learn to do!)
I'm a non-techie so please be gentle! Thank you
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Comments
http://www.dvdflick.net/
Burn the result to dvd-r and dvd+r blanks, the person playing it may have a player that is only compatible with one or the other. Use quality blanks like verbatim or similar.
Don't burn at the full speed capability of the drive or the dvd blanks. I find burning at 4X with 8x disks gives more reliable results.
http://www.dvdvideosoft.com/guides/free-youtube-to-dvd-converter.htm
100% agrree but more modern blu-ray players support a lot more video formats via usb including 1080p24 at the original frame rate.
http://audials.com/en/one/audials_one_windows_software.html