no no no... it is not the computer... it is not the DVD player, it is not the TV.
No matter what a DVD burned with my roxio 9 goes into, it has this problem.
It is not a resolution issue. I am sure that my computers resolution is fine, I am sure that my Sony DVD player's DPI is fine, and I am sure my TV is fine (it is cheap standard def, and has no such settings anyway). I was confused because it is the DVD menus that have the problem after encoding and I was looking in roxio for these settings. The problem must occur somewhere in the encoding process.
I want you to explain to me how the resolution of my computer could possibly effect the highlights of my DVD menus? Like, the "I even" was supposed to imply that the DVD in my not-computer DVD player had this issue (aka, only uses standard screen definitions) and that the way I am sure it is not the DVD player is that the raw image from my ISO file has the exact same problem. The "learn computer basics" punch offends me.
Update: something interesting I discovered. I updated my drivers and directx (I had the most up to date directx before, I can't promise about the nvidia drivers) and when that didn't work I switched to software rendering mode. As you may be able to guess, software rendering takes a great deal longer on my computer. I am waiting on it right now, and in the mean times I was playing with the burned DVDs I have made so far, namly the one that pushes the buttons off the bottom. I discovered for some reason one of the videos isn't resized to the same resolution for "extra long play" but rather remains very close to its original 640x360 size. It also appears that re-encoding the video on the computer burning the DVD is taking a very long time for it as well. It is Xvid rather then Divx, but that isn't the point... Could it be that because this one video is not being resized the way the rest of them are that it is causing the problem with the menus? I wouldn't think so since they are stored on completely different Vob files on the DVD, but perhaps there is a glitch in the software that is causing the size mis-match throughout the entire DVD.
Further Update: switching to software rendering did not fix the issue.
Solution: I confirmed that encoding it is High quality does fix the issue. I am certain that it is a fault in the encoding of the menus that causes the highlights to be set to a higher resolution then the background. (such as the buttons being set to 352x240 yet the highlights being set to 704x280). I wonder if the problem is related to the fact that on some DVD players the video won't size to wide screen despite the video itself being widescreen.
Question: Is it possible to render the Menus at a different resolution as the movies? Or render them at different times? Another thing is if there was a way I could edit the script or whatever on the root of the DVD that adjusted the sizes of the screen. Then it would be possible for me to render 2 DVDs and copy files around on the images before burning them (I did that all the time with Roxio 6 to pass the DVD image max size)
This post has been edited by pants10: 28 March 2007 - 11:20 PM