There are two main reasons that a DVD you burn on your computer isn't recognized as a video DVD: 1. It isn't authored as a video DVD; it's just a DVD-ROM (computer-readable) disc with some sort of video files stored on it. A DVD player expects to see certain folders and certain files (in certain formats) for the disc to be considered a video DVD, otherwise it's just a computer disc.
DVD authoring software creates a disc of the proper format to be recognized as a video DVD. Most won't let you make a DVD without a menu screen for the disc (which can be as simple as a single "Play" icon). You could use Nero, or Roxio (Creator), or many other DVD-authoring software packages -- but -- it is very likely that if your new laptop can burn DVDs then it came bundled with DVD authoring software!
2. It isn't finalized (DVD authoring software usually does this automatically, but you may have to answer a "Do you want to play this on other devices or just this computer?" dialog box).
I suggest using DVD Author Plus, it will burn your movies onto a Video DVD that will work on any DVD player. It is easy to use, works perfectly, and is fast. Download it here: http://www.deskshare.com/dvd-authoring-b...
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