If you want to burn DVD on your Mac, you can find many DVD burner for Mac (10.13 macOS High Sierra included), such as Burn, iTunes, Disk burner, Disco, etc. This DVD burner for Mac can do the basic task on writing a disk quite easily.
Add Add virtually any video to burn to DVD Support to burn any videos taken or downloaded from YouTube, DailyMotion, Facebook, Vimeo etc. Cisdem DVD Burner for Mac has strong compatibility on the video resources and video formats. Video Resource: No matter the SD/HD videos is downloaded online, camcorder recorded, or recorded on iPhone, iPad and other devices, the DVD burner for Mac can burn all these videos to DVD easily.
Video Formats: Support almost all video formats, such as burn MP4 to DVD, YouTube to DVD, HD MKV(H.264, MPEG-2 HD) to DVD, etc. Edit Rotate, crop, add background music & subtitles, customize menus Customize videos with your own idea and store them in DVD. The DVD Burner for Mac gives you a robust assortment of video editing and menu customizing features to make a perfect DVD!. Rotate and crop video files to remove letterboxing, add special effects or watermark to your videos, etc. Add audio tracks as background music or subtitles in other languages to increase the accessibility of the videos - even if the sound is off!. Choose the optional DVD menu templates for different occasion, like festival, family, business, standard, cartoon, and more.
Customize the menu with your favorite thumbnails, buttons, frames and text.
There's a funny meme floating around where someone asks someone else if they can fax something for them, and the answer is 'no, because of where I live.' 'Where do you live,' the confused asker asks.
'In the 21st century,' is the reply. These days, that question (which, fair warning, will likely be the subject of a future Pointers) could just as easily be asked by people who want you to 'burn' something for them, which in computer vernacular means to create or copy an optical disc of media. We already wrote about how to do this when it comes to making a conventional Audio CD out of songs from, say, iTunes, and really only one thing has changed from last year enough to mention, so go back and read that if you want to create audio CDs, and here's the thing that has changed: Apple Music exists now, so to answer the inevitable question quickly: no, you can't burn any music from that service (even if you chose to save for offline listening) to an Audio CD. Your own ripped tracks, yes; your iTunes purchased music, yes; the music you get from Apple Music, no.
This time, we'll focus on making DVDs in the year 2016 on a Mac running a recent version of OS X: because that's so retro and 'aughts' it's a wonder the hipsters haven't picked up on it yet (ironically of course). So let's fire up the telegraph, hop in the horse and buggy, and dig out our typewriters to explain that yes, you can still do this - even without a built-in optical drive, and possibly even without Apple's former built-in tools for doing this. Sometimes, despite the hassle, burning a DVD is the best option.
Who still does this? Sometimes, as with Audio CDs, it is wise to make a backup of movie projects you've created in iMovie, sometimes it's just easier to create a DVD of your college film project for Aunt Livinia and her DVD player than it is to bring her into the 21st century, and sometimes you burn DVDs of videos you have because you need to clear space on your hard drive or flash storage.
Even in these days of Apple TVs and such, or posting things on Vimeo and such, DVDs can still be convenient to have, even if they are not (and never have been) convenient to create. Apple had their best solution for the problem of creating movie DVDs: a fairly-complex (for Apple) but powerful program called iDVD that could take iMovie projects and (pre-converted) video files and, after much time, spit you out a beautiful movie DVD with menus, submenus, full controls, chapter markers, bonus photo content, and more. This naturally worked hand-in-glove with both iMovie and your built-in optical burner, the SuperDrive. Then Apple basically killed off the concept of the internal DVD burner, and also discontinued iDVD (we talked about this in one installment of The Feature Thief). Here's the thing, though: iDVD still works. Well, it has issues with Retina Display Macs, but on non-Retina Macs it still works in El Capitan.
You can even still share an iMovie project to iDVD in a way (not directly as you once could). If you ever owned iDVD on your machine, or transferred all your stuff over to your new machine, iDVD is probably still in your Applications folder. Other hardware and software options If you don't have it, that's not too much of an issue - depending on exactly what you need to work with, you can use some third-party alternatives: there's the free but no-longer-developed (does the job, but doesn't offer any menu options, and does not support Blu-ray), there's the Mac App Store for $20 (which does offer menu options), there's the full Roxio Toast Titanium that often goes on sale (and supports full, proper DVD authoring for about $100), and there are others beyond that. Still possible to burn CD/DVD masters from Disk Utility This again is not a big deal. All modern Macs (by this we mean 2012 and later) have USB 3.0 ports, but even if you only have USB 2.0 ports on your particular machine, attaching an external DVD burner is easy and quick (slower, obviously, on USB 2.0). Conventional (ie DVD) burners are pretty inexpensive, generally under $50, and Burn or Toast or one of the alternatives will convert your video files into the proper format and burn them to a standard DVD. Working with HD files and keeping them in HD is a bit trickier, since this requires a Blu-ray DVD burner and software that will work with it.
You can of course, use iMovie, Final Cut Pro X, or other high-end video editors to edit the footage - but then you have to make a disc out of that without converting the footage down to standard definition (720x480), the format used by conventional DVDs. Typically, an external Blu-ray burner will run around $100, and the disks are often found at any electronics outfit. The full version of Toast Titanium has a bit of a cheat, in that it includes a way to write up to 30 minutes of HD footage on a 'conventional' DVD, but that content can only be played on Blu-ray players. Roxio also sells for Toast Titanium 11 and later that allows authoring of HD footage onto Blu-ray discs with an external BR burner. A stripped-down version without the advanced authoring features, but which will still make Blu-ray DVDs, is available, also for $20 (note that this is not the same program as Toast DVD).