Yes.
EDIT: Wait, though the title said DVI. Fairly sure you can put 1080p on a DVD, though.
Probably not a standalone dvd player on your tv but there's not reason you can burn a dvd with hd video.
Although keep in mind HD video takes alot of space and you won't store very much on the the thing.
[QUOTE=moesislack;34636195]Probably not a standalone dvd player on your tv but there's not reason you can burn a dvd with hd video.
Although keep in mind HD video takes alot of space and you won't store very much on the the thing.[/QUOTE]
what if i own some 8 gb dvds?
You can store any file on a DVD, but you won't be able to play them on a DVD player, only a PC.
If you use a DVD maker, it may downscale the video.
[editline]10th February 2012[/editline]
So you can use the DVD like a memory stick, but it won't work as a video DVD unless the tool downscales them.
You can burn a DVD like a bluray format. I forget the term for it. But you'll only get like 15 minutes of Bluray on it.
[QUOTE=Brt5470;34636943]You can burn a DVD like a bluray format. I forget the term for it. But you'll only get like 15 minutes of Bluray on it.[/QUOTE]
Wouldn't it be more? Blu-rays are like ~25GB or something, dual-layer DVD about 8.
Yes, but you won't be able to play them on a standard DVD player, but could burn it as data which some players can read.
It is just media you can put anything on it, how much you can put on it is another thing. You could put 2160p on the DVD but you may only have about 10 minutes of viewing pleasure
[QUOTE=GoDong-DK;34636972]Wouldn't it be more? Blu-rays are like ~25GB or something, dual-layer DVD about 8.[/QUOTE]
I was referencing normal DVD's. And I think bluray is at 48mbps for audio and video. That comes out to about 12 minutes for 4.7gb disc or 24 for double layer.
You could probably fit an entire movie at 1080p, but it would have to have a much lower bit rate to be able to fit on a single layer disc.
On a dual layer (8gb) DVD, you can get ~1 hour of 1080p video.
[QUOTE=HiddenMyst;34677213]On a dual layer (8gb) DVD, you can get ~1 hour of 1080p video.[/QUOTE]
Only uncompressed, compressed you can get two 1080p films (assuming 4gb compression) which still look much, much better than SD.
[QUOTE=David Tennant;34677543]Only uncompressed, [/QUOTE]
You mean simply not re-compressed? Because fully uncompressed RGB24 in 1080p would be like 50 seconds on a dual layer DVD.
[QUOTE=Brt5470;34679323]You mean simply not re-compressed? Because fully uncompressed RGB24 in 1080p would be like 50 seconds on a dual layer DVD.[/QUOTE]
Do they fill the 25gb single layer bluray disks? I'd assume they compressed it to be as close to the limit as possible.
Either way, 4gb 1080p looks great as it is and most DVDs are 4.7gb in my experience.
To add my own question, what bandwidth does a standard DVD reading laser peak at? I'd of thought that would be the bottleneck for viewing very high resolution media.
I was simply stating that actually uncompressed 1080p is just practically impossible on DVDs. Let alone Optical media.
An hour of 1080p uncompressed is about half a terabyte. So yes it's all compressed, but to varying levels.
[QUOTE=David Tennant;34677543]Only uncompressed, compressed you can get two 1080p films (assuming 4gb compression) which still look much, much better than SD.[/QUOTE]
I was basing it off whatever the standard compression is on most digital cameras. Because whenever a customer asks us how much video they can record on an SD card we quote ~1 hour per 8gb, which is a pretty common standard across digital cameras.
oh man this thread is just people who dont understand video standards and codecs
you guys are all fucking retarded, you can't burn a DVD-format movie at 1080p (even 720p for that matter), it doesn't work that way. You can burn it as a data disk, but that's it. Any time you burn a watchable DVD it's gonna be 720 × 480 AKA 480p. PERIOD.
[editline]17th February 2012[/editline]
if you're burning NTSC that is
[QUOTE=lemonlimecom;34742544]you guys are all fucking retarded, you can't burn a DVD-format movie at 1080p (even 720p for that matter), it doesn't work that way. You can burn it as a data disk, but that's it. Any time you burn a watchable DVD it's gonna be 720 × 480 AKA 480p. PERIOD.
[editline]17th February 2012[/editline]
if you're burning NTSC that is[/QUOTE]
Except that's the entire point. Everyone knows (or at least should) that its not going to work in a standalone DVD player. That's just retarded. But you can easily burn 1080p on a disc as a video file and use it on something that does support the format like a Xbox 360.
You can burn a Bluray format onto a normal DVD is the point I was making. but only a BD player can read it.
Atleast last time I checked. Nero Express has an option for like "Super DVD" or something and that's exactly what it does. It burns a 1.33333 pixel aspect 1440x1080 video on to the DVD that only a BD can read.
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