It’s claim to fame? A script to transform PC multimedia file(s) in any format, into a DVD complete with menus & suitable for playback on a standalone DVD player. So, I then come across any2dvd – usage: any2dvd It’s 9:30pm, I want to have a playable DVD by 10:30-11pm. I run ldconfig and still the same error message. Go to load it and I get this:ĭvdstyler: error while loading shared libraries: libswscale.so.ld: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory They are only in i386 architecture, so I –force-architecture and they install.
DVDSTYLER POST COMMANDS INSTALL
how hard could it be to do this? It turned out to be quite difficult using the Linux tools I could find.įirst, I came across a post that uses DVDStyler, it’s not in Ubuntu repo’s but they have some deb packages so I download and install them. I wanted to do both PAL and NTSC because these DVD’s are going to South America and although they use NTSC there, it’s nothing to burn both just in case there’s some issue with one or the other. All I wanted to do was to grab these 5 movies and put them into standard DVD format. Anyway, we managed to use Sony’s software to dump it to a Windows 2003 server and pulled it across to my Ubuntu machine. It just so happens that Linux doesn’t support this format at the moment (though Windows 2003 doesn’t natively either), so be warned. Mostly because I don’t watch much video except for a wierd philia for watching Cop Chases on Youtube or at the other end of the spectrum, watching the extremely interesting TedTalks using Miro or Google Tech Talks.Īnyway, my sister-in-law purchased a Mini-DVD Sony camera.
![dvdstyler post commands dvdstyler post commands](https://sourceforge.net/p/dvdstyler/discussion/318795/thread/b9eccd4a/33a7/attachment/Settings.png)
I haven’t spent much time with Video editing / DVD authoring on either Linux or Windows.