Roxio Community: My Dvd Deluxe Edition 5.0 - Roxio Community

Jump to content

Roxio Community
Page 1 of 1
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

My Dvd Deluxe Edition 5.0 Having trouble editing an open DVD+RW disc.

#1 User is offline   pappycibak 

  • Newbie
  • Pip
  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 3
  • Joined: 03-February 08

Post icon  Posted 03 February 2008 - 11:47 AM

I am having trouble editing an open DVD+RW disc in MYDVD Deluxe 5.0. The program gets me past the edit scenes window and into the building movie window, but when the little window that shows the progress of the little green spots starts to fill the window it stops at halfway and does'nt go any further. I have over 50 Gigs open on my hard drive, and the computer goes fast. My OS is windows xp home edition, the hard drive is 80 gigs, 512 megs of RAM, an intel pentium processor at 2.660 GHz speed. Can anyone help? unsure.gif
0

#2 User is offline   myguggi 

  • Digital Guru
  • PipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Digital Guru
  • Posts: 18,048
  • Joined: 04-January 06
  • Gender:Male

Posted 03 February 2008 - 12:02 PM

QUOTE (pappycibak @ Feb 3 2008, 02:47 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
I am having trouble editing an open DVD+RW disc in MYDVD Deluxe 5.0. The program gets me past the edit scenes window and into the building movie window, but when the little window that shows the progress of the little green spots starts to fill the window it stops at halfway and does'nt go any further. I have over 50 Gigs open on my hard drive, and the computer goes fast. My OS is windows xp home edition, the hard drive is 80 gigs, 512 megs of RAM, an intel pentium processor at 2.660 GHz speed. Can anyone help? unsure.gif


I am not quite sure what you mean by "editing an open DVD+RW disc in MYDVD Deluxe 5.0". Are you trying directly to edit a video on a DVD? if yes, then that cannot be done. You have to first bring the video to your hard drive and then add the video to the myDVD editor.

Walt

Dell Dimension 4500S;Windows XP Home Edition SP3; Intel® Pentium® 4 CPU 2.00GHz, 784MB RAM
(NVIDIA GeForce FX 5200, 128 MB memory disabled because of failure)
Intel® 82845G/GL/GE/PE/GV Graphics Controller; DirectX 9.0c (4.09.0000.0904)
SoundMAX Digital Audio
SamsunG CDR/DVD-ROm SM 332B
HLDS GSA-5120D External LG Super-Multi ReWriter
WDC WD400BB-75DEA0, 40 GB HD; Prolific PL3507 Combo External Hard Drive, 80 GB; Maxtor 6 L200R0 USB Hard Drive, 250GB

HP Pavilion dv6 Notebook; Intel Duo CPU 64 bit, T6400 @ 2.0Ghz; 4.0 GB RAM; Vista Home Premium 64bit
Toshiba MK3252GSX ATA 286GB hard drive; HL-DT-ST DVDRAM GSA-T50L ATA burner
Intel 4Series Express Chipset

0

#3 User is offline   pappycibak 

  • Newbie
  • Pip
  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 3
  • Joined: 03-February 08

Posted 05 February 2008 - 03:11 PM

What I mean by "Open DVD, I mean that the Media is DVD+RW with a movie that I burned onto it using MYDVD 5.0. Does"nt +RW mean that I can write over what is on the disc? That's what the package says, and that's what the instructions in the help window say. How else do you get the movie on the hardrive other than by following the program instructions?
PS> Thanks for replying to my post.
pappycibak123 at comcast dot net
I am following the instructions in Editing an Open DVD disc in the help file.





Edited to obfuscate the email address

This post has been edited by Brendon: 05 February 2008 - 08:23 PM

0

#4 User is offline   lynn98109 

  • Digital Master
  • PipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 866
  • Joined: 04-January 06

Posted 05 February 2008 - 04:41 PM

There are 3 kinds of discs, either CD or DVD:
  • Commercially pressed discs, which have the pits and lands physically pressed into them (pits and lands are the physical equivalent of magnetic 0's and 1's)
  • R discs, which have the pits and lands set by a laser "cooking" a dye - there are not quite as stable as commercially pressed discs, but close
  • RW discs, which have the pits and lands set by the laser melting and re-crystalizing an aluminum alloy - which promptly starts to de-crystalize, taking all the data with it. At some point in time, the alloy was changed to make the discs less costly, and less reliable. You can't say in advance how long a given disc will last - usually months but it can be days or weeks or years, it varies from disc to disc - but it won't give you an engraved notice two weeks before it goes, it just goes when it goes.

RW media is useful for testing, or for transferring things between computers when there are no other options, and the original files are safely on the originating computer. Then it can be erased and re-used. (If you "delete" a file on either R or RW media, you do NOT gt the space back - you merely delete it from the TOC [Table of Contents]. The difference is you can erase the ENTIRE RW disc and start over.

If you want to make changes in something, you need to either follow Walt's advice, or use a Flash drive (aka Thumb / Keychain / Jump / Pen drive - they come in sizes up to 8GB) or an External Hard Drive in the first place.

Lynn

PS - I'd suggest you might want to remove your email address - these are public Forums, searched by google and other search engines, which in turn are searched by spammers seeking to "harvest" email addresses for spamming purposes ... altho it may already be too late.

This post has been edited by lynn98109: 05 February 2008 - 04:44 PM

0

#5 User is offline   cdanteek 

  • Digital Guru
  • PipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Digital Guru
  • Posts: 19,276
  • Joined: 04-January 06
  • Gender:Male
  • Location:Prairie Rapids Crossing.

Posted 05 February 2008 - 05:39 PM

QUOTE (lynn98109 @ Feb 5 2008, 06:41 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
There are 3 kinds of discs, either CD or DVD:
  • Commercially pressed discs, which have the pits and lands physically pressed into them (pits and lands are the physical equivalent of magnetic 0's and 1's)
  • R discs, which have the pits and lands set by a laser "cooking" a dye - there are not quite as stable as commercially pressed discs, but close
  • RW discs, which have the pits and lands set by the laser melting and re-crystalizing an aluminum alloy - which promptly starts to de-crystalize, taking all the data with it. At some point in time, the alloy was changed to make the discs less costly, and less reliable. You can't say in advance how long a given disc will last - usually months but it can be days or weeks or years, it varies from disc to disc - but it won't give you an engraved notice two weeks before it goes, it just goes when it goes.

RW media is useful for testing, or for transferring things between computers when there are The bad: Fixed menu buttons; will not mix NTSC and PAL video; doesn't back up to hard drives;no other options, and the original files are safely on the originating computer. Then it can be erased and re-used. (If you "delete" a file on either R or RW media, you do NOT gt the space back - you merely delete it from the TOC [Table of Contents]. The difference is you can erase the ENTIRE RW disc and start over.[/s]

If you want to make changes in something, you need to either follow Walt's advice, or use a Flash drive (aka Thumb / Keychain / Jump / Pen drive - they come in sizes up to 8GB) or an External Hard Drive in the first place.

Lynn

PS - I'd suggest you might want to remove your email address - these are public Forums, searched by google and other search engines, which in turn are searched by spammers seeking to "harvest" email addresses for spamming purposes ... altho it may already be too late.


pappycibak, carry on now, you have actually used the software. Problem is, not many here on the Roxio site has!

The bad: Doesn't back up to hard drives.

MyDVD Studio Deluxe, even re-edit CDs and DVDs you've already burned, because MyDVD Studio Deluxe is OpenDVD compliant.

cd
cd
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Intel i7-950, Asus P6X58D Premium, Asus GeForce GTX 460 1GB 256-bit GDDR5, 12 GB Corsair Dominator Triple Channel DDR3 1600 SDRAM, Sound Blaster X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Professional, Corsair Hydro CWCH50-1 CPU Cooler, Crucial RealSSD C300 128 GB SATA III OS Drive, Raid 0 Stripe Array, JBOD, W-7 Ultimate x64.. cdanteek built...

Intel C2D E8500, Asus P5Q3 Deluxe WIFI, ATI HD 4850 512MB GDDR3, 4 GB Corsair XMS3 DDR3-1600, X-Fi XtremeMusic, JBOD, W-7 Pro x64 W-7 HP x32, Vista & XP HM x32. cdanteek built...

BenQ 1640, 1650, 1655, Dell Qflix PLDS DX-20A6Q 6D14, LiteOn DH20A6S, NEC 3550, Pioneer BDR 205, Plextor 712, 716, Samsung SH-S203N, Samsung SH-S243N, Sony 800A, 810A, 810A-R

1.Click here Beginners Guide - Blank DVD Media Type Definitions & What A Firmware Upgrade Is for Your Burner.
2.Click here Firmware HQ - site dedicated to providing you with the latest firmware releases for your optical disc drives.
3.Click here CD-DVD Speed
4.Click here CD-DVD Speed - A user guide
5.Click here Enabling/Checking DMA in Windows Vista, XP, 2000, Me, 9x.
6.Click hereYou can no longer access the CD drive or the DVD drive.
7.click here Drive Not Recognized By Roxio, PX Engine 3_00_58a. Old Version<-> EMC 7.5 Up PX Engine 4.18.16a. Update .Click here
8.Click here How to uninstall IE 7 and WMP 11.
9.Click here ImgBurn Current version: 2.5.3.0 (5,262 KB) CD / DVD / HD DVD / Blu-ray burning application
10.Click here InfoTool (Drive, Disk, Configuration, Software, Hardware, DMA settings, etc.).
11.Click here. Complete Uninstall of Creator 2011 & Creator 2012
12.Click here. Complete Uninstall of Creator 2009 and 2010 (Windows Vista and 7)
13.Click here Complete Uninstall of Creator 2009 and 2010 (Windows XP)
14.Click here Complete Uninstall of Easy Media Creator 9 & 10 on Windows Vista
15.Click here Complete Uninstall of Easy Media Creator 7.5, 8, 9, & 10 on Windows XP
16. Click here WinZip Data Compression Utility <> Click here WinRAR Data Compression Utility Click here 7-Zip Data Compression Utility
0

#6 User is offline   lynn98109 

  • Digital Master
  • PipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 866
  • Joined: 04-January 06

Posted 05 February 2008 - 06:57 PM

RW is still NOT a good long-term choice, even if it might be for short-term use, for the reasons given above.

I see you want to continue to assume everyone else is as knowledgable as you are.

Lynn
0

#7 User is offline   Brendon 

  • Digital Guru
  • Group: Digital Guru
  • Posts: -8,384,433
  • Joined: 04-January 06
  • Gender:Male
  • Location:Christchurch, N.Z.

Posted 05 February 2008 - 08:27 PM

QUOTE (lynn98109 @ Feb 5 2008, 06:57 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
I see you want to continue to assume everyone else is as knowledgable as you are.

Lynn

I don't think he does. We have a lot of examples of people who are not as knowledgeable, but just pretend they are.
P4 @3.20GHz on Albatron PX-865PE Pro II with 2GB DDR-SDRAM, FX5900XT video, Viewsonic monitors,
BENQ DW1640, in XP Pro and Windows 7

I blame it all on Global Warming / Global Cooling / Global Staying the Same [pick one]
0

Share this topic:


Page 1 of 1
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

1 User(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users