Product Directory
DVD Clone
Clone DVD V3.6.1.0 Pick!
DVD Cloner III Pick!
WinAVI DVD Copy
DVD Clone Studio
Super DVD Copy
DVD Copy Tools
 
Video Converter
Cucusoft Converter Pick!
DVD Santa Pick!
X Video Converter
Xilisoft Video Converter
WinAVI Video Converter
Video Audio Image Converter
ImTOO MPEG Encoder
Fx Video Converter
AVI to DivX
 
DVD Region+CSS Free
DVD X Ghost Pick!
DVD Region + Css Free
 
Video Editor
Fx Joiner and Splitter
Fx Movie Joiner
Fx Movie Splitter
 
DVD Ripper
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Xilisoft DVD Ripper
CUCU DVD Ripper
Super DVD Ripper
AoA DVD Ripper
 
CD Burner
Acoustica MP3 CD Burner
X2CD Muisc Mp3 CD Burner
Ease MP3 CD Burner
 
CD Ripper
Cool CD Ripper
Fx Magic Music CD Writer
 
MP3 Converter
Cool MP3 Converter
Video to Audio Converter
CD to MP3 WAV Maker
WAV MP3 Converter
EasyRMtoMP3
 
Audio Editor
Ease Jukebox
Fx Audio Editor
MP3-Cutter-Joiner
Vioce Change Pick!
 
Audio Recorder
Super mp3 recorder
Ease MP3 recorder
EZ MP3 recorder
 
DVD Burner
MPEG to DVD Burner
 
DVD Copy Software
DVD XCopy Pick!
Perfect DVD Duplication
Super Clone DVD
 
Music Creation
Acoustica Mixcraft
MusiGenesis
 
DVD Player
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Other DVD Tools
Xilisoft 3GP Video Converter Pick!
Xilisoft PSP Video Converter Pick!
Photo DVD Maker
 
Other Website Links
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FAQs
  • [1.18] What's a dual-layer disc? Will it work in all players?

    A dual-layer disc has two layers of data, one of them semi-transparent so that the laser can focus through it and read the second layer. Since both layers are read from the same side, a dual-layer disc can hold almost twice as much as a single-layer disc, typically 4 hours of video (see 3.3 for more details). Many discs use dual layers. Initially only a few replication plants could make dual-layer discs, but most plants now have the capability. The second layer can use either a PTP (parallel track path) layout where both tracks run in parallel (for independent data or special switching effects), or an OTP (opposite track path) layout where the second track runs in an opposite spiral; that is, the pickup head reads out from the center on the first track then in from the outside on the second track. The OTP layout is designed to provide continuous video across both layers. The layer change can occur anywhere in the video; it doesn't have to be at a chapter point. There's no guarantee that the switch between layers will be seamless. The layer change is invisible on some players, but it can cause the video to freeze for a fraction of a second or as long as 4 seconds on other players. The "seamlessness" depends as much on the way the disc is prepared as on the design of the player. OTP is also called RSDL (reverse-spiral dual layer). The advantage of two layers is that long movies can use higher data rates for better quality than with a single layer. See 1.27 for more about layer changes.

    There are various ways to recognize dual-layer discs: 1) the gold color, 2) a menu on the disc for selecting the widescreen or fullscreen version, 3) two serial numbers on one side.

    The DVD specification requires that players and drives read dual-layer discs. There are very few units that have problems with dual-layer discs--this is a design flaw and should be corrected for free by the manufacturer. Some discs are designed with a "seamless layer change" that technically goes beyond what the DVD spec allows. This causes problems on a few older players.

    All players and drives also play double-sided discs if you flip them over. No manufacturer has announced a model that will play both sides, other than a few DVD jukeboxes. The added cost would be hard to justify since discs can hold over 4 hours of video on one side by using two layers. (Early discs used two sides because dual-layer production was not widely supported. This is no longer a problem.) Pioneer LD/DVD players can play both sides of a laserdisc, but not a DVD. (See 2.12 for note on reading both sides simultaneously.)

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Function Directory
DVD to iPod
DVD to Zune
DVD to PSP
DVD to DVD
DVD to VCD
DVD to AVI
DVD to MPG
DVD to WMV
DVD to ASF
DVD to RM
DVD to MP3
DVD to SVCD
DVD to MPEG
DVD to XVID
DVD to DIVX
============
AVI to DVD
AVI to VCD
AVI to SVCD
AVI to MPEG
AVI to MPG
AVI to WMV
AVI to ASF
AVI to RM
AVI to MOV
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MPEG to DVD
MPEG to VOB
MPEG to AVI
MPEG to ASF
MPEG to WMV
MPEG to VCD
MPEG to SVCD
=============

RM to DVD

RMVB to DVD
RM to MPG/MPEG
RMVB to MPG/MPEG
RM/RMVB to AVI
RM/RMVB to VCD
RM/RMVB to SVCD
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MPG to DVD
WMV to DVD
ASF to DVD
SWF to DVD/AVI/MPEG
SVCD to DVD
VCD to DVD
Photo to DVD
=============
DVD Player
DVD Labeler
AVI Joiner
MPEG Joiner
AVI Splitter
DVD Splitter
MPEG Splitter
DVD Region Free
DVD Audio Ripper
Video to 3GP
Guides
Copy DVD To DVD
This section's guides cover all the steps you need to follow in order to copy a DVD Video disc.
Copy Multiple Movies In 1 DVD-R
Learn how to add 2 or more movies from different DVD disc in to a single recordable media.

Split DVD-9 To 2 DVD-R
Follow these guides in order to split a DVD-9 in two DVD-Rs and preserve original quality.

DVD Rip
Convert your DVD discs to various formats like DivX/XviD/(S)VCD/miniDVD and rip your DVDs to the hard disk.
DVD Burn
These guides help you burn the DVD files you already have in your hard disk.
DVD Author
Authoring means creating DVD files off an DVD compatible MPEG video file, and these guides show you how to do it.
All To DVD
Convert all video formats like DivX/XviD/RealVideo/WMV/VCD and more into a DVD Video disc playable in your standalone.
DivX/XviD To DVD
Covers only DivX/XviD to DVD conversions. You better have a look to both these and the ones above.
(S)VCD To DVD
Turn your old VCD and SVCD discs into DVD video.
DV To DVD
Learn how to capture video from your DV camera and convert it to DVD.
Video Edit
General video editing stuff, like AVI join and merge.
MAC
DVD copy and rip in MAC.