Nero Burning ROM, commonly called Nero, is an optical disc authoring program from Nero AG. The software is part of the Nero Multimedia Suite but is also available as a stand-alone product. It is used for burning and copying optical media such as CDs, DVDs, and Blu-ray disks. The program also supports the label printing technologies LightScribe and LabelFlash, and can be used to convert audio files into other audio formats.
Nero Burning ROM is a pun in reference to Roman Emperor Nero, who was best known for his association in the Great Fire of Rome. The emperor allegedly fiddled while the city of Rome burned. Also, Rome in German is spelled Rom. The software's logo features a burning Colosseum, although this is an anachronism as it was not built until after Nero's death.[2]
Nero Burning ROM is only available for Microsoft Windows. A Linux-compatible version was available from 2005 to 2012, but it has since been discontinued.[3] In newer versions, media can be added to compilations via the Nero MediaBrowser. Nero AirBurn, a new feature in Nero 2015, enables users to burn media straight from their mobile devices.[4] The latest version is Nero Burning ROM 2017 released in October 2016 including SecurDisc [ru; de] 4.0 with 256-bit encryption.
Nero Burning ROM works with a number of optical disc image formats, including the raw uncompressed image using the ISO9660 standard and Nero's proprietary NRG file format. Depending on the version, additional image formats may be supported. To use non-natively supported formats such as lossless FLAC, Wavpack, and Shorten, additional program modules must be installed. The modules are also known as plug-ins and codecs and are usually free, although Nero AG sells some proprietary video and audio plug-ins. Standard CD images created by Nero products have the filename extension .NRG, but users can also create and burn normal ISO images.
I am uncertain which board this query should be addressed to. After burning data folders ( which are completely normal in My Documents) to CD and DVD using Nero6, the discs have only IE7 icons as folder and file symbols, with no readable content. This issue has arisen only since I installed IE7. Would there be a weird file assocation problem?
Your advice is eagerly awaited!
Many thanks
Dianne
PS Have just tried a burn using the native XP function, with the same weird result.
Tacitus was a member of this Roman elite, and whether there is a bias in his writing is difficult to know. Indeed, Tacitus was still a boy at the time of the fire, and he would have been a young teenager in 68 A.D., when Nero died. Nero himself blamed the fire on an obscure new Jewish religious sect called the Christians, whom he indiscriminately and mercilessly crucified. During gladiator matches he would feed Christians to lions, and he often lit his garden parties with the burning carcasses of Christian human torches. Yet there is evidence that, in 64 A.D., many Roman Christians believed in prophecies predicting that Rome would soon be destroyed by fire. Perhaps the fire was set off by someone hoping to make the prediction come true.
Originally got it hoping to Convert some older Former VHS Recorded Series shows to DVD at the highest quality possible, but the few disks i did burn didn't seem to be in 16:9, and upconvertable to 1080P with my TV DVD player
I personally would not be converting video files to DVD in 2024. You are better playing your media on the TV with a cheap Mini PC / Android TV box running Kodi, no need to convert the video or burn any DVD's.
**Plus it was doing Notification Try Ads for Full Versions of other Programs at times, little Popup, of course i clicked Don't show again** but i figured i haven't used it since December 10th, besides opening Nero start to check for updates here and there**
Like already mentioned by InsaneNutter, burning standard video DVD's nowadays ain't really worth it anymore (unless it's something obscure that you can't find in better quality elsewhere etc). especially if you can just play the files through another device on the TV, like say through a laptop with HDMI port etc.
so while DVD ain't exactly 'dead', it's obviously taken a solid hit in general usage over say the last 10 years or so as it seems a lot of people moved on from physical media to streaming etc. personally when it comes to this stuff I am of the mindset I would always prefer to have a copy of something in my possession then use some streaming crap where it could disappear anytime. because if you got a copy, then you can always use that as something you can watch whenever you want into the future.
p.s. pretty much the only CD/DVD burning software I have used for a long time now is ImgBurn (works well on Linux once setup properly) as it's still nice to have around for a limited amount of higher importance data backup on DVD and even a occasional Audio CD I burn (I know 'Audio CD' is old for some, but sometimes the old ways are better than the newer stuff). I still think DVD is good for a limited amount of higher importance data backup as while many will say DVD is outdated etc it's still one of the best ways to backup a limited amount of higher importance data for long term storage. because as long as SATA ports don't disappear anytime soon and as long as drives that can read CD/DVD don't disappear anytime soon, which I am guessing won't be a issue for at least another 5-10+ years, I feel they will be something people could still use 10-20+ years from now to some degree. because short of general hard drive backup, which is better for general backup then DVD, DVD comes in handy for something you need to reliably depend on for 10-20+ years at least as I have a fair amount of DVD's I burned roughly 15 years ago and they are still in good running order to this day with no obvious degradation (as shown with KProbe etc). so if you are using quality media with decent burn quality etc, my guess is DVD's will last decades at least, which will be more than enough for most people.
I'm not sure what you are using to digitize the VHS tapes in the first place, but once you have a digital file to work with, you can always use Handbrake (free video conversion tool) to fix the formatting, upscale, etc. and then use something like Nero or ImgBurn (free disc reading/writing tool) to write to the DVDs.
An alternative to writing-to and watching-on DVDs could be using a media server such as Kodi or Plex to serve these videos directly from your computer to the client device you are watching them on (roku/firestick/media pc/etc).
Was Trying with Nero Recode to capture the VHS tapes with a USB Capture Device--Suprisingly being as old as 1995 when show reaired very lately on Local Fox Channel, Quality of original tapes wasn't bad
Nero Video back in November, and sitting on Storage drive as mp4 files currently, attempted to reconvert with Nero Recode/Nero Video into 16:9, 1080P discs, and first 3 discs didn't look so great with TV DVD Player lol, so i finally just was like forget it.
I have had a decent amount of success with handbrake myself, however I mostly use it to reduce file size while retaining quality. If the mp4 files you are working with are decent quality, I think you should get some decent results out of handbrake as far as converting to 16:9 / 1080p goes.
Have not used Nero for awhile was doing this on my old PC after installing BD, now doing the same on my New PC. When I open Nero to burn to a CD when I click on the file it just keeps circling. is there a way I can turn off BD managing my DVD burner?
If the generated logs are larger in size, you can upload the logs to google drive or we.tl (7days link validity for free users) or ask the support team to provide you with the online link & password of bitdefender cloud where you can upload the logs and share the upload link with the support team.
I finally figured out how to use Nero. First Nero claims it's Edge partly, but Nero works fine on my laptop w/o Bitdefender. Then again i do not think I have Windows defender turned on either. What I found if say I want to burn an image (iso). I right click the iso file and select burn image using Nero. I suppose if I wanted to burn files like in a data disk I would select the files or folders and then select burn using nero. so if you wanted to hop around and get different files and folders would make it quite interesting. Bitdefender please buy a copy of nero for your test machine and get this figured out....please, this has been an issue for me on 2 different PC's over 2+ years when i install Bitdefender
A DVD with up to 8.4GB is still used as one of the main methods to store your personal movies music libraries, and home videos, especially for high-quality large files. By burning them to a DVD, you can watch it on TV or DVD player, or send a copy to friends. In this article, I will show you how to burn video files to DVD with Nero Burning ROM, one of the most popular software for burning and copying CDs, DVDs, and Blu-ray discs.
WinX DVD Author empowers even novice to burn MP4, MKV, AVI, VOB, FLV, MOV, ISO and other videos to DVD disc easily. It can make home video DVD with personalized DVD menu, subtitle, and other elements.
** Note ** Nero Burning ROM can't convert video files to DVD-Video, AVCHD video, or BDMV-Video. Nero Burning ROM only supports burning ready DVD files. If you have another type of video to burn, like avi or mkv for example you need to convert them to DVD format first.
Step 5: Then you need to drag the files to the Video_TS folder on the left side. You need to make sure all your files are inside the VIDEO_TS folder. Then click the Burn icon on the top toolbar.
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