Ok basically I didn't know where else to post this... Basically I've got a couple of NBA basketball games on the computer and i would like to convert them so i can watch them on the dvd player. A couple of problems though, I have been looking around and have had no lucky trying to find out how to go about this. Firstly the format is in XVID, the whole game is in two parts, each part being 699mb. Below are the details of the files which i copied from the source: Length: 52mn 34s + 49mn 26s Video: XviD Codec, 512x384 Reolution, 1714 Kbps + 1832 Kbps Audio: MPEG-1 Layer 3 CBR, 48000Hz 128 kb/s tot , Joint Stereo Already posted before but in a low quality, this DVDRip should be good enough for you collecters.. I face two problems, firstly I was under the impression that joining these two parts then burning them would be the easiest way (because my idea is to basically burn 2 games if they can fit onto 1 DVD with menu's) The first problem I face is joining these two files, I didn't have much success finding a joiner (although maybe I was looking for the wrong program). I ended up using Nandub and even though it worked, when I played the file on Windows Media Player and there was alot of action on the screen, it would as if lag a little (the original 2 separate files didn't lag) basically like when you play a computer game and there's too much shit on the screen and your graphics card can't handle it and starts lagging. HOWEVER when i played the one file and the two separate files on VLC media player they both worked fine (no lag). So I don't know if this is a WMP problem. The second problem I face is finding a program that will be able to covert these files to DVD format (whatever that would be) without losing too much (if any) quality. I have searched up and down but with no success, the problem is I really don't know what format I'm suppose to convert to (if needed) nor what program to use to merge these 2 files and burn the file/s. Any help is GREATLY appreciated and if anyone has any suggestions (eg. keeping the files separate rather then merging for whatever reason) then that also GREATLY appreciated =). I really want to watch these games on my TV so please help =)!
I often convert Xvids to DVD format, and I use a program called WinAVI Video converter. Another program that does the same job is called TMPGenc Express. As for the lagging problem, that may or may not be a problem when you eventually get them on a DVD.