My wife had to take a driver's course
after getting a speeding ticket to lower her fines. They allow
you to rent a DVD course from Blockbuster or the like, and watch
it at home and take a test on the content online..
The course was 8 hours, and it was all on 1 DVD.. it was 4:3 SD
computer animated stuff, with text screen graphics and character
animation and stuff.. I was quite surprised while watching it, how
clean the footage was.. and we were watching it on our 130" front
projection screen TV..
Once i checked the disc, I realized why it looked fine and held so
much data. The disc was dual-sided dual-layered, which can hold
up to 17.4GB of data..
a DVD-9 (Dual Layer 8.5GB) should hold 240 minutes at a normal
compression rate, so maybe just bump the compression down a little
bit to get the VOBs to fit within around 8GB ?
You would only have to worry about read issues with archaic DVD
players .. and when I say that, I mean, as far as I know, most
movies that have been released on DVD since 1999 or 2000 are
Dual Layer -R.
Just make sure you use -R.. not +R.. or any form of R/W.. for
some reason the + discs tend not to work in about half of the
players out there.. especially the cheaper ones. and they seem to
be more finicky about burning properly.. at least in my
experiences..
///Greg Balint
//Art Director / Motion Graphics Designer
/321.514.4839
delRAZOR.com/
On 7/30/2012 3:38 AM, Jonathan Penzner wrote: