When you take quite a big amount of flip videos, you may run into the issue of backing up flip videos or archiving flip videos. Saving your flip videos on your computer hard drive or on a mobile hard drive is for sure an option, if you have enough space on your hard drives. But a better solution would be burning flip to DVD so you can easily store your flip videos or share them with your friends and family.
Many flip video camcorder users tend to take many flip videos since it is very easy to take videos with a flip video camcorder.
The next is important if you want to
burn flip video to DVD.
If you are a Windows User, you can use Window DVD Maker to do the burning. However, flip videos are mostly in MP4 formats, which are not supported by Windows DVD Maker. So you need to convert flip to Windows DVD Maker supported formats, for example WMV. To do the conversion from flip video to WMV, Doremisoft Flip Converter is an excellent choice.
Part One:
Convert flip to Windows DVD Maker
Step 1: Add flip videos to Doremisoft
Flip Converter
Click the "Add File" button to locate the flip videos you want to burn from your hard drive, select them, and click "OK" to add them to Diremisoft Flip Converter.
Step 2: Select WMV format as the output format
Click the "Profile" drop-up list, you will see all the preset profiles, move your mouse cursor to "Common Video", and you will see all the preset common video formats to the right, scroll down to the very bottom, and you will see WMV Video. Click on it to select it.
Step 3: Start to convert flip video
Click the "Start" button to start converting flip video to Windows DVD Maker WMV. After the conversion, click on the "Open" button and you can find all the converted files in the opened folder.
Part Two: Burn flip video to DVD with Windows DVD Maker, the step by step you can view at
How to Burn Flip Video to DVD on Windows
Windows DVD Maker is an application included in premium editions (Home Premium and Ultimate) of Windows Vista, and Windows 7 Home Premium and above editions that is designed to enable the creation of DVD movies that can be played using DVD playback software or on a standalone consumer DVD player. In some ways, it is comparable to iDVD in Mac OS X.
Applications can pass an XML file to DVD Maker, thus using its MPEG-2 video and Dolby Digital audio encoding abilities in their own applications.
The application DVDMaker.exe is located in C:\Program Files\DVD Maker by default.
Windows DVD Maker has a simple Aero Wizard-style user interface. The first step of the wizard involves importing video files from the computer's file system. The videos can be rearranged to play in a different order, and Windows DVD Maker automatically splits the videos into scenes that can be accessed from a special Scene Selection page in the DVD menu system.