The first time you use the video burning feature, RealPlayer may prompt you to download additional software from RealNetworks. Click OK to accept the software, which must be installed before RealPlayer can access your video burning drive. RealPlayer may restart.
About the burn listThe clip order in the burn list will define their order in the disc's on-screen menu. If you choose to not include an onscreen navigation menu, the disc will play the clips in the burn list order automatically upon playback.
Transfer Status shows you whether the clip is ready to burn. When you burn the disc, Transfer Status shows you the transfer progress of the individual clips (in %).
Tracking your burn list/disc capacity: Near the bottom of the Burn pane, just above the Player Control bar, an info display tracks the file size and total duration of the clips in the burn list. If the amount of media in the burn list exceeds the capacity of the disc, RealPlayer will alert you. You may delete clips to fit the list to the disc, or else replace the disc with a higher capacity disc.
Deleting a clip: To delete a clip from the list, right-click it and select Delete.
- You can edit Menu Text. To specify the text that will identify a clip on the finished disc's menu, select the clip text under Video Menu Text, then edit it. (Or right-click the clip and select Rename, then edit it.)
- Enter a name or title for the disc. The default name is the first clip in your burn list.
- Select whether or not you want the disc to display on-screen menus. If yes, enter a menu header. (Default is the Menu Text for the first clip in your burn list.) If you choose to not include a menu, playback will begin immediately with the first clip in the burn list and continue through each subsequent clip on the disc.
About the MenuIf you opt for an on-screen menu in the "Video Burning Options" dialog, RealPlayer will create the menu's visual layout for you. The clips appear in the menu with the Menu Text applied to them. Each menu item is numbered in order: 1, 2, 3, etc. The disc title (from Video Burning Options) appears at the top of each menu page.
- If the disc holds 1 clip, it is centered on the screen.
- If the disc holds 3 clips, they appear in a triangle with one clip centered on top.
- If the disc holds 4 clips, they appear in a 2 x 2 grid listed in top-to-bottom, left-to-right order.
- If the disc holds 5 or more clips, they appear in a 2 x 4 grid in top-to-bottom, left-to-right order.
- For more than 8 clips, the menu is divided into 2 or more on-screen pages. You can click freely from one page to another to access their menu items.
Video Burning Options: Advanced OptionsIn the "Video Burning" dialog, click Advanced Options to open a new dialog where you can view or adjust a few basic recording settings:
Video output standard: The technical playback standard encoded into the video for your compatible video player.
- NTSC (default) — NTSC is the video playback standard used in the United States, Canada, Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, Mexico, and other countries. Use this setting if your video player is NTSC compliant.
- PAL/SECAM — PAL and SECAM are video playback standards used throughout most European countries, most of South America, and other regions that are not NTSC compliant. Use this setting if your video player is PAL or SECAM compliant.
Resolution:The quality of your video playback image, which depends on the quality of the video. RealPlayer can't change a low-quality internet video file into a high-definition video file. For example, most older internet videos were recorded at 480p (720x480). Burning one at 1080p (1920x1080) will not improve its appearance and may even make it look worse.
For true high-definition videos, such as ones recorded by a home video camera, 720p (1280x720) or 1080p (1920x1080) is a better choice.
- 480p (720x480)
- 720p (1280x720)
- 1080p (1920x1080)
Burn Device: Select the local drive where your video burner is located.
Write Speed: Select how fast you want the media to burn onto your disc. Check with your disc manufacturer for the optimum write speed appropriate for the disc.
Click Save to preserve any changes and close the Advanced Options dialog. Or click Cancel to cancel any changes and close the Advanced Options dialog.
The maximum total duration for an AVCHD disc is 60 minutes.
An AVCHD disc is a DVD in AVCHD format. (AVCHD stands for Advanced Video Coding High Definition, a type of format for recording and playing high-definition video.) AVCHD discs can be played only on a Blu-ray player.
Note: Not all services and features are available in all countries. Services and features will be added as they become available.
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