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EDIT: HOW DO YOU BURN MKV FILES? (Sorry not FLV)
I've been having this problem for a while about them and i was just wondering if there would be a specific technique or program that could do this.
I've tried:
- MKV to AVI converter - there is only one which i believe that's really crap
- Windows Media Classic - renaming it to avi or something else.
If there are any other ways.. please do help. cheers!
Last edited by mdp123; 08-25-2007 at 11:19 AM.
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08-25-2007, 01:55 PM
Software & Hardware -
#2
I don't burn MKV files but if I would, they'd be as easy as any other file. After all, they're only a different container format (Matroksa) but are video files just the same. The more important question is what you want to get out of burning them:
x) do you want to watch those movies via your hardware divx/xvid player on your tv?
x) do you simply want to archive those files?
H264/x264 is a common video codec used with the Matroska multimedia container and if you think about re-encoding those videos to xvid, then you should have downloaded said xvid releases in the first place. A loss of detail and therefore quality is the result of such a step and I don't believe you routinely want to do that.
For archiving files with sizes larger than 2gb (I believe that's what the usual iso9660/joliet specification allows) your only solution is using the UDF. That might create some compatibility problems if you're unlucky but it's the only way to get a file larger than 2gb on a disc in one piece.
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08-25-2007, 02:22 PM
Software & Hardware -
#3
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08-25-2007, 04:45 PM
Software & Hardware -
#4
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08-25-2007, 06:29 PM
Software & Hardware -
#5
I'm not sure I see the problem. Burn them as a normal data-disc. If you need to split them use....mkvmerge GUI
The question is what do you want to play them on??? And are they hi-def???
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