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What's the program you are using?
You can try burn your disc on PC with a professional DVD/Blu-ray burning program, it should be more promising. And you don't have to manually finalize the disc. 5 Best Free Blu ray Burners to Burn Blu ray Easily
Burn them to a CD/DVD using the proper software. An ISO is an image file. Use a CD/DVD burning app to burn them to the proper media in order to see the individual files. Alternatively, there are a few applications that will let you "edit" the ISO, such as WinZip, I think.
Many of these drives came withdriver and video editing software that includes writing the final product.to a dvd. My LG drive came with cyberlink video software. This allows loading video files in many different formats, editing using the included tools to add titles, cut out parts not wanted, setting chapters, then produce by burning to the drive onto a blank dvd disc. Blanks come in dvd-r , dvd+r , and dvd-rw formats.
The disc will play on dvd players. When you look at the disc with your computer, all you can see are the marker names. You cannot copy files from video discs.
Other video editing software are: Cyberlink, Roxio, Etc...
If you need product software, go to the link and enter your drive model number.
http://msa.lge.com/product_listing?pageIndx=0&pagerId=0&catalogId=285&orig=index&md2psid=2-131468373284123264
Two things: 1. Make sure that you chose the writer drive (burn to DVD) and not "hard drive" in the options window that appears when clicking on "Produce" and then on "Burn to disc". 2. SlideShow Expressions can develop problems when the photos are too large and when the project your trying to burn is quite large as well. What is too large? I can only speak from own experience. I found that once a project gets into the range of 400 or more photos (total) my writer fails to write. (I've burned projects containing up to 388 successfully; photos at original size) However, this can be solved by resizing your photos. I have a project with 466 photos (10 chapters) that wouldn't burn to disc. I then resized the photos so that every single one was under 500 KB. It worked: burning is now successful. Resizing doesn't necessarily mean that the quality of your photos will drop. I used Microsoft Office Picture Manager and, really, visually there is no difference between the original photos and the resized photos in the slideshow project. Experiment with photo size. Maybe another size works for you. It is also known that chosing the archive option (having the original photos and music burned to the disc) can upset the burning process - but only really when it's a very large project. Also, you could be using the wrong type of disc. Try DVD+R. 11407336
Check the specs on your dvd player. Not all players will read dvd-r discs. Some players will only read commercially produced dvds. Hope this helps & please take a moment to rate my answer. Thanks.
whatever programme you are using, ensure that if you have a second cd/dvd drive that this one is not set as the default burner, as there are normally options to choose.
other than that the drive must be being used by another burning programme or a programme to read discs, so check that there are no other programmes running in the background that use the writer.
Lastly, go to my computer, right click>properties>hardware tab>device manager and in the list dvd/cd drives, click'+' sign and on you drive, right click, select uninstal and reboot the pc, at which point the drive will be installed again automatically and hopefully, release the drive for whatever you want to burn.
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