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Open Control Panel > Programs and Features. Click on "Turn Windows features on or off" and scroll down to "Media Features". Click on the + sign to expand it, and put a check mark in the box next to Windows DVD Maker. It may ask you for your Win7 DVD. After it finishes installing you may have to reboot, but that's it.
DVD Maker is not available in Windows 10. To find an app for creating DVDs, visit the Windows Store. Do let us know if you have any other queries pertaining to Windows in the future. We will be happy to help. Thank you.
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This is to inform you that the Windows DVD Maker isn't supported on Windows 10. However, if you want to create DVD-Video or Blu-ray discs compatible with home-theater components, try using an app. Select the Start button and then choose Store under the Start menu. In the Store, search for an app with the features you're looking for.
This is an HP laptop running Windows 7 Home Premium and Windows DVD Maker came pre-installed with Windows. I searched Microsoft's website for how to download a genuine version of Windows DVD Maker from Microsoft, but all I found was the "Windows Movie Maker and Windows DVD Maker SDK", as in Software Development Kit--which was not helpful.
When you use the Burn to DVD option from Movie Maker, it calls another program called Windows DVD Maker to make a video DVD. Windows DVD Maker comes with Windows Vista and Windows 7. It's not present in Windows 8 or 8.1. If you don't have the Burn to DVD option, it means you are on a version of Windows without Windows DVD Maker.
Something I really miss in Windows 10 is the Windows DVD Maker. I tried to get it running on Windows 10 by copying the DVD Maker directory from Windows 7 over to Windows 10. When I run it, I get the following error: I know there are other DVD making programs out there, some are even free, but the few I have tried do not compare to Windows DVD ...
That is the only Movie Making software I know of on here. If you mean the Windows DVD software or whatever in the old versions of Windows DVD Maker that was in Windows 7 I don't believe Windows 8 and above support it. Movie Maker is the next closest thing to a DVD maker. If you are wanting to burn a DVD I know that Windows Media Player lets you ...
I'm going to write the process here in case anyone is experiencing the same problem: The guy downloaded Virtual CD and created a virtual drive with a virtual blank DVD, he then set the DVD Maker to burn with the virtual drive, saved the burnt file as ISO and used another program to burn it.
Windows DVD Maker came free with Windows 7 so I'm not sure what you mean by "purchased" and "registration code". If you paid someone then it wasn't the official version that came with Windows 7. Microsoft stopped including Windows DVD Maker in later versions of the OS possibly because the video DVD is considered a "legacy" format that can't ...