2010
can I burn a movie on a dvd burner when it is being played on a ps3?
Filed Under (dvd burner) by admin on 02-02-2010
I have got connected to my flat-screen panasonic television,a panasonic dvd writer and a ps3,when playing a movie on the ps3,can I burn it at the same time on the dvd burner?
That’s basically what dvd recorders were made for, right?
but not via HDMI. HDCP encryption would block you, just like the old Macrovision on VCR’s.
You would have to use either composite or component cables. Component would be better because quality would seriously suffer. Both are analog outputs, so you would be using the DVD recorder to re-digitize an analog signal. Better to have it be a high-resolution signal then.
It’s possible that there’s some copy protection that could block you, even if you use composite.
Another problem you might have is that consumer dvd recorders don’t really compress the video. And recordable dvd’s can’t fit more than 60 to 80 minutes of uncompressed video. Commercial dvd’s that you rent are 9gb, whereas recordables are 4.7gb. And guess why they made it that way?
If your recorder is good enough that you can pause the movie when the first disc ends, then finish the recording on another disc, it might be worth it. It won’t give a great quality recording but it might be worth it.


It wouldnt be hard, but it wouldn’t be easy either. depending on the inputs on your dvd burner (i’d recommend A//V cables [red, white, and yellow wires]) you could put the output of your ps3 a/v cables into the input of your DVD recorder and do it that way. only thing that sucks about THAT is most dvd writers dont burn movies in chapters.. the newer ones might thought
References :
Computer Science/Electrical Engineering major
That’s basically what dvd recorders were made for, right?
but not via HDMI. HDCP encryption would block you, just like the old Macrovision on VCR’s.
You would have to use either composite or component cables. Component would be better because quality would seriously suffer. Both are analog outputs, so you would be using the DVD recorder to re-digitize an analog signal. Better to have it be a high-resolution signal then.
It’s possible that there’s some copy protection that could block you, even if you use composite.
Another problem you might have is that consumer dvd recorders don’t really compress the video. And recordable dvd’s can’t fit more than 60 to 80 minutes of uncompressed video. Commercial dvd’s that you rent are 9gb, whereas recordables are 4.7gb. And guess why they made it that way?
If your recorder is good enough that you can pause the movie when the first disc ends, then finish the recording on another disc, it might be worth it. It won’t give a great quality recording but it might be worth it.
References :
Here is a step by step guide to burn DVD from any video formats. It works well for me.
http://www.freedvdripper.org/dvdvideoguide/how-to-convert-avi-mpeg-divx-wmv-mp4-rm-video-to-dvd.html
Unbiased reviews and side-by-side comparisons of the DVD creator give you enough information to research the ins and outs of a particular product:
http://www.topsreviews.com/reviews/dvd-creator-review.html
Burn DVD on Mac; try this DVD burner for mac.
http://www.macdvdconverter.com/mac-dvd-creator.html
Also, you can search some other software:
http://www.ask.com
References :