I am reading through documentation I found in
http://www.xcdroast.org/manual/dvd.html
It says ==11111=============================================================== Make sure you have a kernel version 2.4.x or higher. (you can test this with the command uname -a). Next, download the appropiate binary of cdrecord-ProDVD for your system from:
ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/cdrecord/ProDVD
For current linux distributions this would be the binary that ends in -i586-pc-linux-gnu, e.g. cdrecord-prodvd-2.01a12-i586-pc-linux-gnu
What you downloaded is a binary, that means, it can directly be used. So, copy it to the xcdroast-bin directory (mostly /usr/lib/xcdroast-0.98/bin or /usr/local/lib/xcdroast-0.98/bin). Name it "cdrecord.prodvd". (I spent 2 hours of error tracking because I renamed it to "cdrecord-prodvd", what is wrong!) Call chmod 755 cdrecord.prodvd to make it executable. ==11111=================================================================
==22222================================================================= uname -a returned the following for me:
Linux p4 2.4.22-1.2174.nptl #1 Wed Feb 18 16:38:32 EST 2004 i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux
the above was on one line but Yahoo Mail's word wrap forced "i386 GNU/Linux" to be on a seperate line. ==22222=================================================================
==33333================================================================= Im running an Intel P4 and going to ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/cdrecord/ProDVD provides me with a list of files. My best guess for the file to download is cdrecord-prodvd-2.01a27-i686-pc-linux-gnu I was hoping to find a 2.4 in the file name but... Can anyone tell me if that is the correct file? ==33333=================================================================
Is there perhaps a newer/other program that has DVD burning built right in to the application?
===== The true measure of a man is how he treats someone who can do him absolutely no good. -Samuel Johnson, lexicographer (1709-1784)
On April 8, 2004 10:06 pm, Mel Seder wrote:
I am reading through documentation I found in
http://www.xcdroast.org/manual/dvd.html
It says ==11111=============================================================== Make sure you have a kernel version 2.4.x or higher. (you can test this with the command uname -a). Next, download the appropiate binary of cdrecord-ProDVD for your system from:
ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/cdrecord/ProDVD
For current linux distributions this would be the binary that ends in -i586-pc-linux-gnu, e.g. cdrecord-prodvd-2.01a12-i586-pc-linux-gnu
What you downloaded is a binary, that means, it can directly be used. So, copy it to the xcdroast-bin directory (mostly /usr/lib/xcdroast-0.98/bin or /usr/local/lib/xcdroast-0.98/bin). Name it "cdrecord.prodvd". (I spent 2 hours of error tracking because I renamed it to "cdrecord-prodvd", what is wrong!) Call chmod 755 cdrecord.prodvd to make it executable.
Hey Mel...
Here is an article I wrote for Call-A.P.P.L.E.
DVD burning under Linux
Well strictly speaking it is a single application under Linux. For now I'll be talking about a data DVD.
Actually a couple of months ago I would never thought I'd be writing about this subject. Chris (my business partner in Digital Civilization) dropped off a DVD burner. It seems we may have some potential clients who want us to transcribe some home movies for them. Chris already has a video input card and since I have the faster computer (and a decent graphics output) she decided my machine was to be the one where the editing was to take place.
Between the two of us, neither has had any experience with DVD burners. CD burners and DVD readers are no problem. In fact the DVD burner had the reader part configured automatically. Nothing easier. Linux said “I recognise this. I'll set it up right away.”. Nothing to install. Just run MPlayer and let it play a DVD. As one friend is fond of saying... Mickey Duck!
The program we are used to running is called xcdroast. It is a front end for the command line cdrecord and mkisofs programs. After doing a bit of research I found there is an alternative program called k3b. I'll take a look at it as I get the time. As an aside, it is a good idea to go and grab the latest version of xcdroast from http://www.xcdroast.org because many of the distributions tend to include cut down versions.
It turns out there are modules for DVD creation in xcdroast. Unfortunately there is a particular driver and key code which need to be installed. Again, after research I found it is a relatively simple and painless process. To tell the truth I goofed the first time I installed the driver. I downloaded an earlier version and forgot to change the permissions to something appropriate.
After a bit more digging I came across the following page (picture me smacking my forehead and uttering an exasperated “D'Oh!”).
http://www.xcdroast.org/xcdr098/README.ProDVD.txt
This page gives the directions necessary to install DVD burning support in to xcdroast. The long and short of it is to go here...
ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/cdrecord/ProDVD/
To download the correct version of the driver for the computer. Then put it into the correct directory. As they say... (e.g. /usr/lib/xcdroast-0.98/bin or /usr/local/lib/xcdroast-0.98/bin)
Then rename the file to "cdrecord.prodvd". Then set the file permission with chmod to 755. This will allow the root account to put in the key (which expires in February 2004). The key can be found at...
ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/cdrecord/ProDVD/README
The directions given by the ProDVD folks are not appropriate to xcdroast. Use the directions found on the xcdroast site.
These directions allowed me to set up and create a data DVD. Since the whole point of getting a DVD burner and a video input card was to transcribe some home movies this is one way to do it. The next step is to see if we can get it to work in a console DVD device.
Mike Pfaiffer
I'm curious what software you are going to use when editing video under linux?
John
On Fri, 2004-04-09 at 02:39, Mike Pfaiffer wrote:
On April 8, 2004 10:06 pm, Mel Seder wrote:
I am reading through documentation I found in
http://www.xcdroast.org/manual/dvd.html
It says ==11111=============================================================== Make sure you have a kernel version 2.4.x or higher. (you can test this with the command uname -a). Next, download the appropiate binary of cdrecord-ProDVD for your system from:
ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/cdrecord/ProDVD
For current linux distributions this would be the binary that ends in -i586-pc-linux-gnu, e.g. cdrecord-prodvd-2.01a12-i586-pc-linux-gnu
What you downloaded is a binary, that means, it can directly be used. So, copy it to the xcdroast-bin directory (mostly /usr/lib/xcdroast-0.98/bin or /usr/local/lib/xcdroast-0.98/bin). Name it "cdrecord.prodvd". (I spent 2 hours of error tracking because I renamed it to "cdrecord-prodvd", what is wrong!) Call chmod 755 cdrecord.prodvd to make it executable.
Hey Mel...
Here is an article I wrote for Call-A.P.P.L.E.
DVD burning under Linux
Well strictly speaking it is a single application under Linux. For now I'll be talking about a data DVD.
Actually a couple of months ago I would never thought I'd be writing about this subject. Chris (my business partner in Digital Civilization) dropped off a DVD burner. It seems we may have some potential clients who want us to transcribe some home movies for them. Chris already has a video input card and since I have the faster computer (and a decent graphics output) she decided my machine was to be the one where the editing was to take place.
Between the two of us, neither has had any experience with DVD burners. CD burners and DVD readers are no problem. In fact the DVD burner had the reader part configured automatically. Nothing easier. Linux said “I recognise this. I'll set it up right away.”. Nothing to install. Just run MPlayer and let it play a DVD. As one friend is fond of saying... Mickey Duck!
The program we are used to running is called xcdroast. It is a front end for the command line cdrecord and mkisofs programs. After doing a bit of research I found there is an alternative program called k3b. I'll take a look at it as I get the time. As an aside, it is a good idea to go and grab the latest version of xcdroast from http://www.xcdroast.org because many of the distributions tend to include cut down versions.
It turns out there are modules for DVD creation in xcdroast. Unfortunately there is a particular driver and key code which need to be installed. Again, after research I found it is a relatively simple and painless process. To tell the truth I goofed the first time I installed the driver. I downloaded an earlier version and forgot to change the permissions to something appropriate.
After a bit more digging I came across the following page (picture me smacking my forehead and uttering an exasperated “D'Oh!”).
http://www.xcdroast.org/xcdr098/README.ProDVD.txt
This page gives the directions necessary to install DVD burning support in to xcdroast. The long and short of it is to go here...
ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/cdrecord/ProDVD/
To download the correct version of the driver for the computer. Then put it into the correct directory. As they say... (e.g. /usr/lib/xcdroast-0.98/bin or /usr/local/lib/xcdroast-0.98/bin)
Then rename the file to "cdrecord.prodvd". Then set the file permission with chmod to 755. This will allow the root account to put in the key (which expires in February 2004). The key can be found at...
ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/cdrecord/ProDVD/README
The directions given by the ProDVD folks are not appropriate to xcdroast. Use the directions found on the xcdroast site.
These directions allowed me to set up and create a data DVD. Since the whole point of getting a DVD burner and a video input card was to transcribe some home movies this is one way to do it. The next step is to see if we can get it to work in a console DVD device.
Mike Pfaiffer
On April 9, 2004 05:51 pm, John Lange wrote:
I'm curious what software you are going to use when editing video under linux?
John
I was thinking of Blender and Cinerella (new version of Broadcast 2000).
Later Mike
On Fri, 2004-04-09 at 02:39, Mike Pfaiffer wrote:
On April 8, 2004 10:06 pm, Mel Seder wrote:
I am reading through documentation I found in
http://www.xcdroast.org/manual/dvd.html
It says ==11111=============================================================== Make sure you have a kernel version 2.4.x or higher. (you can test this with the command uname -a). Next, download the appropiate binary of cdrecord-ProDVD for your system from:
ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/cdrecord/ProDVD
For current linux distributions this would be the binary that ends in -i586-pc-linux-gnu, e.g. cdrecord-prodvd-2.01a12-i586-pc-linux-gnu
What you downloaded is a binary, that means, it can directly be used. So, copy it to the xcdroast-bin directory (mostly /usr/lib/xcdroast-0.98/bin or /usr/local/lib/xcdroast-0.98/bin). Name it "cdrecord.prodvd". (I spent 2 hours of error tracking because I renamed it to "cdrecord-prodvd", what is wrong!) Call chmod 755 cdrecord.prodvd to make it executable.
Hey Mel...
Here is an article I wrote for Call-A.P.P.L.E.
DVD burning under Linux
Well strictly speaking it is a single application under Linux. For now I'll be talking about a data DVD.
Actually a couple of months ago I would never thought I'd be writing about this subject. Chris (my business partner in Digital Civilization) dropped off a DVD burner. It seems we may have some potential clients who want us to transcribe some home movies for them. Chris already has a video input card and since I have the faster computer (and a decent graphics output) she decided my machine was to be the one where the editing was to take place.
Between the two of us, neither has had any experience with DVD burners. CD burners and DVD readers are no problem. In fact the DVD burner had the reader part configured automatically. Nothing easier. Linux said “I recognise this. I'll set it up right away.”. Nothing to install. Just run MPlayer and let it play a DVD. As one friend is fond of saying... Mickey Duck!
The program we are used to running is called xcdroast. It is a front end for the command line cdrecord and mkisofs programs. After doing a bit of research I found there is an alternative program called k3b. I'll take a look at it as I get the time. As an aside, it is a good idea to go and grab the latest version of xcdroast from http://www.xcdroast.org because many of the distributions tend to include cut down versions.
It turns out there are modules for DVD creation in xcdroast. Unfortunately there is a particular driver and key code which need to be installed. Again, after research I found it is a relatively simple and painless process. To tell the truth I goofed the first time I installed the driver. I downloaded an earlier version and forgot to change the permissions to something appropriate.
After a bit more digging I came across the following page (picture me smacking my forehead and uttering an exasperated “D'Oh!”).
http://www.xcdroast.org/xcdr098/README.ProDVD.txt
This page gives the directions necessary to install DVD burning support in to xcdroast. The long and short of it is to go here...
ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/cdrecord/ProDVD/
To download the correct version of the driver for the computer. Then put it into the correct directory. As they say... (e.g. /usr/lib/xcdroast-0.98/bin or /usr/local/lib/xcdroast-0.98/bin)
Then rename the file to "cdrecord.prodvd". Then set the file permission with chmod to 755. This will allow the root account to put in the key (which expires in February 2004). The key can be found at...
ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/cdrecord/ProDVD/README
The directions given by the ProDVD folks are not appropriate to xcdroast. Use the directions found on the xcdroast site.
These directions allowed me to set up and create a data DVD. Since the whole point of getting a DVD burner and a video input card was to transcribe some home movies this is one way to do it. The next step is to see if we can get it to work in a console DVD device.
Mike Pfaiffer