I think Panasonic may make one with a DivX decoder (.avi files). It may play them, but ask someone at the store.
If not, if you have Nero to burn CD’s, you can burn the files, in lower quality, on a SVCD (super video CD). Take a regular blank CD (not DVD), burn the movie in SVCD format, and you can watch it, in a little lower quality, on a DVD player.
The answer is that AVI files need to be converted to DVD format. It does not matter what disc you burn it on DVD-R or DVD+R without the right format it will not play in your DVD player.
You need to run a conversion software. The one I am using now is called convertxtodvd. You have to pay for it, but it is so easy to use. You can choose between PAL and NTSC format (Europe or USA). Just drag and drop the file you want converted into a box and click 1 button. It will even burn it for you too. And it’s a relatively quick process. (Depends on your PC and the DVD burner).
There are free shareware programs out there, but from what I have researched many are slow and cumbersome. You could also research DVDFlick or Winavi as alternatives.
I think Panasonic may make one with a DivX decoder (.avi files). It may play them, but ask someone at the store.
If not, if you have Nero to burn CD’s, you can burn the files, in lower quality, on a SVCD (super video CD). Take a regular blank CD (not DVD), burn the movie in SVCD format, and you can watch it, in a little lower quality, on a DVD player.
The answer is that AVI files need to be converted to DVD format. It does not matter what disc you burn it on DVD-R or DVD+R without the right format it will not play in your DVD player.
You need to run a conversion software. The one I am using now is called convertxtodvd. You have to pay for it, but it is so easy to use. You can choose between PAL and NTSC format (Europe or USA). Just drag and drop the file you want converted into a box and click 1 button. It will even burn it for you too. And it’s a relatively quick process. (Depends on your PC and the DVD burner).
There are free shareware programs out there, but from what I have researched many are slow and cumbersome. You could also research DVDFlick or Winavi as alternatives.