yes i have a question Im using Nerovision 5 when i burn a dvd but when i watch my dvd on my dvd player it will play for awhile and then it would stop for like i dont know 5 mins and play again and do the samething and i would have to fast forward thru the part that would pause i was wondering if there is away to prevent or fix the dvd from doing that
You need to determine if the problem is the result of a flaw on the disc or a flaw in the file structure. If Nero 5 has a utility such as CD/DVD Speed that later versions have to check disc quality, run that. If you notice large error spikes in the readout, then the cause is most likely a problem on the disc (dirt, scratch, disc flaw, and so forth. You may even see the flaw under a halogen light.) If the scan results are very good, the problem might be in the file structure or the inability of the DVD player to read the disc. The DVD player may have problems with recorded DVDs or with some other factors in the recording process that a scan may not show, such as jitter.
well i just checked the disk and there was No scratches or anything like that on it.and also checked the cd/dvd speed and there wasnt any spikes in it so i guess its the dvd player so is there away to fix the problem and so there wont be no pause or jitters at all? i know most of the time i burnt dvd and before the dvd wouldnt pause like that
More things to try:
1) Try playing the DVD on another DVD player. If it works without pausing or stopping, then the file structure is OK.
2) If the file structure is OK, you would need to improve compatibility with the DVD player in one of three ways--
a) if the disc is a DVD-R, record another disc or record another disc from a different brand/manufacturer. There are differences in the geometry of the molded guide tracks in a disc from one manufacturer to another that might make a difference.
b) if the disc is a DVD+R disc, see if you can alter the type settings recorded on the disc from DVD+R recordable disc to "DVD-ROM." This is known as booktyping, but it's actually book type falsifying. DVD players that see a disc as a DVD-ROM change their settings to accommodate such discs better than recorded discs.
c) if the disc is a DVD+R disc, try a DVD-R version. DVD-R discs are approved by the DVD Forum, and your DVD player ought to recognize it (in a perfect world.)