There's no shortage of DVD burning software, but tools from the likes of Nero and Roxio can be too This is a small sacrifice for an excellent free DVD burner that will serve you well for years to come. There are lots of menu templates to choose from, and the program is available for Windows, Mac. Canon driver for mac. ![]() ![]() I use toast, but do not know which formats it supports, but found this on their site: Supported Input Formats: • Audio: AAC, AIFF, MP3, WAV, M4A, OGG, FLAC and Dolby® Digital AC-3 • Video: AVCHD, AVCHD Lite, AVI, DivX Plus HD, DV, FLV and F4V for Adobe® Flash®, MJPEG, MOV, MKV, MPEG-1/2/4, VOB, VIDEO_TS folder, shared iMovie® projects, EyeTV recordings, and TiVoToGo™ transfers • Photo: BMP, GIF. JPG, PDF, PSD, PNG, TIFF • Disc Images: ISO, BIN/CUE, IMG, DMG, CDR, NRG And here is an explanation on your mts. You have to understand that iDVD is more than just a burning software - in fact, to me the burn capability is the last thing when I think of iDVD. I use it because I am able to give my 'master pieces' a polished and professional look. After I have all the movies, slideshows, etc. I open a new project in iDVD and custom design one of their themes/menus with my own background videos, music, pics, whatever - that is what you will see on your TV screen when you first push play on your DVD player; from that menu screen you can choose which chapter/movie/slideshow (all of it or separately) you want to watch. Here is a screenshot of a sample menu I just put together (in actual use, the various panes would be moving with background music until you click on one of the movies to watch): As to your other question: I tried their bluray plugin once about 2 years ago, at that time, you could only use it with regular DVDs and I could not see much of a difference in the quality. I have not tried to burn anything in bluray because my external burner is not bluray. I use Toast because I have it - it came with my burner (although I did pay since to update it). It is excellent and does lots of things besides a plain burn - just check out their website. It's also easier to control my external burner with Toast. Don't know if it makes it a better quality especially since the encoding is done in iDVD (I use the professional quality setting), but I am happy with the results of my workflow, so one tends to stick with what works. Now, Toast also has a few menus to choose from, but they are not customizable and too 'plain jane' for me. For the project I showed above, I used one of the themes in iDVD, dragged photos in the various moving panes and another into the background and inserted the text and some music. Once burned to a DVD, you'd be able to click either of the titles in the semi-transparent pane and the movie would start playing. Apple Footer • This site contains user submitted content, comments and opinions and is for informational purposes only. Apple may provide or recommend responses as a possible solution based on the information provided; every potential issue may involve several factors not detailed in the conversations captured in an electronic forum and Apple can therefore provide no guarantee as to the efficacy of any proposed solutions on the community forums. Apple disclaims any and all liability for the acts, omissions and conduct of any third parties in connection with or related to your use of the site. All postings and use of the content on this site are subject to the.
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