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I have a client who want me to add PDF's to a DVD, so that people can view them through their televisions

Can it be done?

3 Answers 3

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I know this is dated link, but for what is worth...

DVD Studio Pro allows you to create a Data DVD alongside the video DVD.

Check your DVDSP Inspector for DVD Assets. This is a great way to include files and images, even presentations that you wish clients to open and view.

There is also DVD@ccess which allows you to embed URLs into buttons that will cause the DVD player to stop (on a computer) and launch your browser.

Just FYI

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  • this is what we did in the end.
    – Mild Fuzz
    Commented Apr 1, 2011 at 11:03
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Sure. You need to convert the pages of the PDF into images and handle accordingly from there, much like a photo slide show. The primary concern I would have is whether the PDF is laid out so that it looks good on screen.

Acrobat (the full version, not Reader) can export all pages to a variety of formats. Acrobat costs good money, but Preview only exports the first page. Ghostscript via Terminal might have a free alternative, but the interface is the command line.

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  • My first try would be a simple drag-and-drop from Preview to DVD Studio Pro.
    – mouviciel
    Commented Oct 21, 2010 at 14:59
  • @mouviciel nice try, but the blessing hasn’t arrived there yet, and DVD is “so abandoned” by Apple that we might never see anything like that. Commented Oct 21, 2010 at 17:51
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I would use PDF to Keynote, and then just export from Keynote as a QuickTime movie.

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