![]() Otherwise my first choice for ultimately making a DVD is a used DV camcorder with analog-to-digital pass through. This only makes sense if you expect to do a lot of this. Then I use the Toast Media Browser to extract the videos from the discs, then trim them in the Toast editor prepare a menu and burn the final DVD. This is a bit technical but with those devices (neither of which are connected to a computer) I record the video in "VR mode" to rewritable discs. Both the Pioneer and The Sony record in MPEG 2 format which eliminates the need for Toast's encoding when making the final DVD. ![]() With my Sony Blu-Ray recorder I need to burn a disc and then copy the video to Toast for editing. I have a standalone Pioneer DVD recorder that has a built-in hard drive so I can edit with it (without a computer) before burning to DVD. If you use a device that captures to the Mac then you can do editing after the capture. ![]()
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