DVD Authoring

by Doug Connery ~ January 28th, 2012. Filed under: e-toolkit learning, Reflection, Uncatagorized.

In the summer of 2011, my son Linden and I went on a 14-day wilderness backpack in the Canadian Rockies. I was the photographer and took many pictures. Once we got home and down loaded the pictures to a computer, I organized them and deleted the not so great pictures. In the end there are about 560 pictures or about 40/day. From there the next question was what do we do next other than use them as a slide show screen saver. I did use one of the pictures on the mast head of my ETEC 565 e-portfolio website seen above.

Over the fall I took MET course ETEC 540: Text Technologies. We had some self-directed time to play around with some technologies. I took the opportunity here to create a video of the pictures of our trip. I used Windows Movie Maker and did two versions with the best pictures, full length, 16 minutes and a 4 minute trailer. I posted the trailer on U-Tube and gave the U-Tube link in my course discussion posting so all could see. The link is here: Ball to Boine to Burstall trailer. I created the full length version so we could show friends. The trailer is about 400 Mb and the full length version is about 1.6 Gb.

At the end of each year on December 31 or January 1, I always do DVD backups of files on my computer. So I did this with several DVD’s as I had taken lots of pictures throughout the year. I make two copies and send the second copy’s to my son’s house for redundancy.

For this exercise I decided to create an additional backup CD just of the two video’s (trailer and full version) and the 560 images. In total there is about 3.4 Gb of data, plenty of room on a 4.7 Gb DVD. As I had just completed doing my yearly back-ups four weeks ago, the process was fresh in my mind. However when I only burn DVD’s once /year it does take a while to figure out where the blank DVD’s are, which of the two DVD players on my PC to use, which software to use (default windows or specialty) and how to use the software. So this exercise with everything fresh in my mind, only took about 10 minutes to do: five minutes to find the DVD, find the files, the software and hit ‘burn” and five minutes to create the DVD. As I don’t have a second computer or DVD player in the house, I made sure it worked on the PC’s second DVD player. Since I was familiar with the process I found the process was not labour intensive, not challenging and there were no surprises.

As an addition to this exercise we should ask ourselves, are DVD’s still relevant in this day and age where we can post our videos and images on the cloud, for example through U-Tube and Flicker. This question came to me when I brought the newly minted full length version of the video over to my son’s house in November on a flash drive so he could have a copy. His comment was why didn’t you just post it on U-Tube like you did the trailer, this eliminates the need for flash drives and DVD’s. I really did not have an answer to his question that fit into his digital age context. For me however, I am happy with a DVD backup (several now) of my video Masterpiece and all of the pictures.

1 Response to DVD Authoring

  1.   John Egan

    We still have a suprising number of classroooms in Canada where the only learning technologies are white/blackboards, overhead projectors and TVs with DVD players. For folks working in those contexts, finding a way to leverage the TV/DVD player is very helpful.

    Until recently my Dad wouldn’t watch anything online: only read websites. When he and Mom had a chance to watch me during a live stream a couple of years ago, they couldn’t manage it. Ditto the captured YouTube version. So I had to find a blank DVD (wedged in the corner in the back of the closet), and mailed them one so they could see what the rest of the family was nattering about.

    I’m hopeful his new Kindle Fire will shift that. 🙂

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