There's a promotional DVD that needs to be downloaded so that it can be posted to veiw on the intranet at work. The A/V tech's are having a problem with this request.
Can't I just record the DVD using Vegas 6 to my hard-drive and render it to an MPEG-2 file.
If each client computer has a DVD software player, you can just copy the files to a shared drive on the network, and they can play the disc just like the DVD was inserted in their local DVD drive. They'll probably have to have some sort of DVD software player in order to play MPEG-2 files, so even if you take the extra, unnecessary step, to convert to an MPEG-2 file, they'll still need the player. Thus, I'll stick with my first recommendation: just copy the files to a shareable resource and you're done.
Don't re render, just copy the files from the DVD to the server that is networked to the computers at your work.
What John is referring to I think is that without some sort of DVD player installed on the computers, Windows Media Player won't play it b/c it does not have the available codec for reading VOB files. I am sure there is some open source DVD player for windows out there- just do a search for it on the web, that is, unless you have DVD players installed on the computers. (if they came with a DVD ROM drive, they most assuredly will have a DVD player installed on them.
The only other issue you might hit is generating a lot of network traffic if everyone starts watching it at once.
Encoding the video as WMV would alleviate this to some extent.
Bob.