Question:

Will movies play in a dvd or xbox if i burn them in a dvd in avi format?

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i need something that converts then so i can burn the movies and view them in my xbox, but i don't want it to put any water mark or st like that, FREE! help please

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  1. No, DVD format is VOB and MPEG-2 format, you have to convert your AVI video to the right format at first, otherwise it cant be played on normal DVD player. If you don't know how to convert and burn DVD, here is a step by step guide for you

    http://www.top5soft.com/tutorial/how-to-...

    If you have any other questions, feel free to email me.


  2. You can try the all-in-one great DVD and video software, meet all your needs. It converts DVD's and videos to play on almost any portable device including iPod, iPhone, Zune, PSP, video capable MP3 players, video capable mobile phones, and Pocket P.C., etc. Meanwhile, it can also support output almost any audio/video format including Video format(H264, MP4, WMV, AVI, MOV, RM, 3GP, flv, SWF, mpeg-1, mpeg-2, VCD, SVCD, DVD, etc.) and Audio format(AC3, AAC, MP2, MP3, MP4, RA, WMA, etc.).

    http://www.youtubetoipod.org/cucusoft-ul...

    Also, you can search some other software:

    http://www.ask.com

  3. I don't know freeware to burn to DVD or Xbox , my friends recommend this video converter and dvd burner software to me, it's not free, but it works pretty well, I think it well worth the money, If you need more info, you can free download it here

    http://www.flash-video-soft.com/avs-vide...

    good luck,

  4. if you just complete a few quick tasks on this site they'll send you an xbox 360, completely free of charge!!

  5. Xbox, no, probably not (assuming it works like the PS2, which I've tried). Dvd-player, it depends. Old dvd players probably will not but a lot of newer ones do (also it depends on your disc... my friend's dvd player only can play burnt videos from dvd-r and not dvd+r while my mom's can play both dvd-r and dvd+r.... avi is pretty universal so if it says it plays burnt discs, avi should be okay... most machines also play mpg/mpeg as well... other formats you should look up). The best way to find out though is experiment, that's how I found out about the dvd+r versus dvd-r. When I burn the disc I don't put a watermark or finalize or anything. I just do the "add Data column," add the file, then burn... everything works a-okay.

    Also, it depends on the file quality. Some videos for some reason or another will not play, even though they are in a simple avi format.

    So again, to make absolutely sure (as I don't know your DVD-player type) just experiment.

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