I did a few slideshows with I photo and I Dvd and it was pretty difficult to burn it on a dvd and play it on a dvd player. I change slideshow program, Fotomagico, and I have the same problem. I have a slideshow Mpeg 4, I can play it on my screen but not on my Tv with a dvd player. Do you know a format that will work for a dvd player? Which converter software can I download?
Commercial DVDs are mpeg2 format.
FfmpegX is a pretty versatile converter.
But iDVD should work just fine to burn slideshows onto DVDs - I have done this many times. You might want to post the specific issues you are having to the
iDVD Forum.
You are not very specific about what's difficult about burning to the DVD and playing on a DVD player. Most consumer DVD players will not playback MPEG4.
Standard Video DVDs have a very specific layout. The disc itself needs to be recorded in UDF format (which is a variation of the ISO9660 format of CD-ROMs). The disc must have a VIDEO_TS ("video title set") folder at the top level (there can also be an AUDIO_TS folder, but on DVD Video it generally doesn't have any data in it). The VIDEO_TS folder must have a collection of .IFO (title information), .VOB (video object), and .BUP (.IFO file backup) files. There must be one VIDEO_VTS.VOB, VIDEO_VTS.IFO, and VIDEO_VTS.BUP file for the disk VGM (disc title) menu, then a series of VTS_* files with the titles themselves on them.
The .VOB files are actually multiple video (one main, the rest are alternate "angles"), audio (one or more languages, for instance), and subtitle streams multiplexed together. The video must be encoded as MPEG-2 at 9.8 Mbps or less, or MPEG-1 at 1.856 MBps or less. Permitted resolutions are 720x480, 704x480, 352x480, or 352x240 pixels at 29.97 frames per second for NTSC video (used in the USA and Canada), and 720x576, 704x576, 352x576, or 352x288 pixels at 25 frame per second for PAL/SECAM (used in the rest of the world). There are also some specific requirements on the frequency of I, P, and B-frames in the video streams, etc.
The audio may be encoded as PCM, DTS, MP2, or AC3 -- and there are of course requirements as to the frequencies, number of channels, and bitrates permitted for each.
The .IFO files contain information about the number of streams in the VOB, where they are, the chapter information, etc.
When you use iDVD to create and burn a DVD, it takes care of the whole business of encoding and formatting the DVD for you to be compliant with the requirements for DVD Video. You just tell it what you want, and it encodes the video, writes the IFO data, and builds the DVD for you.
When burning a DVD, keep in mind that slower burns result in more reliable disks, so burn the disk at the slowest possible speed. If you are going to burn several copies, and you have disk space, it's handy to simply create a DVD image file that you can burn later with Disk Utility.
Also, keep in mind, not all set-top DVD players handle recordable media (particularly dual-layer and read/write media) very well. Some brands of recordable media are also better than others. Older DVD player may not be able to read recordable DVDs at all. Many players handle DVD+R better than DVD-R, though older players might prefer DVD-R disks.
I download Handbrake, Switch, ffmpeg (but apparently I have to download another mpeg2enc, mencoder and mplayer... and I can't find it!!! So, doesn't work!!!) and Xilisoft, which I try to convert my mpeg 4 file to Mpeg 2 Movie format, and at the end I have just the sound without any pictures.... I will turn crazy soon!!!!
I used Iphoto and Idvd for my 1st slideshow, and burn it like a disc image. Is there a way to do that with my Mpeg 4. I tried to import my slideshow in Idvd, but I have a error message : unknown format.
I get a bit confused, and need help before turning really crazy in front of my mac...
The best way to view a slide show on your dvd player is to export your slideshow from iPhoto. This creates a .mov file that will be able to be run with Quicktime. Now import the .mov file to Toast Titanium and create a Video CD (VCD format). You can put many slideshows on a VCD. This works very well.
Open iDVD. Create a new project. Drag the icon for your MP4 into the project window (e.g., the window with the DVD menu displayed; the icon should have a little green circle with a white '+' appear on it when it's over that part of the app). If it's really MP4, it should be added to your project.
You can do this with any movie format that Quicktime Player understands. It will automatically convert the MP4 movie to MPEG-2 as part of the DVD creation process. Keep in mind that the MP4 starts out slightly lower quality than the MPEG-2 stream, and it's going to degrade a little farther during the process of format conversion.
You don't need Handbrake (which rips MPEG2 from DVDs), Switch (audio file converter), or FFMpegX (swiss army knife of A/V format conversion).
Also, next time exporting a slideshow from iPhoto, it's much simpler to simply export it directly to iDVD: Select the menu item "Share > Send to iDVD" and cut out the middlemen entirely.
Maybe you're getting confused with the slideshow feature in iDVD. That is for showing full-frame still images and you add the photos themselves to iDVD to create that kind of slideshow. What you've done in iPhoto is create a movie and so you need to add it to iDVD as a movie, not as a slideshow.