DivX Author Features Compared: Which Version Is Right for You?

How to Use DivX Author — Step‑by‑Step Tutorial for Beginners

Overview

DivX Author is a tool for creating DivX-encoded video discs and files with menus, chapter points, and subtitles. This guide assumes you want to create a playable DivX disc or an MP4/AVI file with simple menu/chapter navigation.

What you’ll need

  • Source video files (MP4, AVI, MKV, DVD rip, etc.)
  • Optional subtitle files (SRT) and audio tracks (AC3, AAC)
  • Enough disk space (project files and encoded video can require several GB)
  • DivX Author installed (latest compatible version)

Step-by-step workflow

  1. Import source videos
    • Open DivX Author and create a new project.
    • Add your video files via drag-and-drop or the Add button.
  2. Arrange clips and trim
    • Drag clips into the timeline or storyboard in the desired order.
    • Use the trim/cut controls to remove unwanted sections (set in/out points).
  3. Add chapters
    • Place chapter markers at key points on the timeline so players can jump between sections.
  4. Add subtitles and alternate audio (optional)
    • Import SRT files and position them per clip.
    • Add alternate audio tracks and set default or selectable tracks.
  5. Create menus (optional for discs)
    • Choose a menu template or create a custom background.
    • Add buttons linked to titles, chapters, or external actions.
    • Set button text, layout, and background music if supported.
  6. Configure encoding settings
    • Choose output format (DivX AVI or MP4).
    • Set resolution (e.g., 720×480 for DVD-like, 1280×720 for HD), bitrate (target quality), and frame rate.
    • Enable two-pass encoding for better quality at constrained bitrates.
  7. Preview project
    • Use the built-in preview to check video, audio sync, subtitles, chapters, and menu navigation.
  8. Export/author disc
    • For a file: select Export and choose folder, filename, and container settings.
    • For a disc: select Author Disc, choose target (CD/DVD/DivX disc), insert blank media, and start burning.
  9. Test the final output
    • Play the exported file in multiple players (DivX Player, VLC) and test on a standalone DivX-compatible player or TV for disc outputs.

Tips for best results

  • Use the highest-quality source available; re-encoding reduces quality.
  • Match the output resolution to your source to avoid unnecessary scaling.
  • When targeting older DivX players, prefer MPEG-4 ASP (DivX ⁄7 compatibility) and conservative bitrates.
  • Use two-pass encoding for better bitrate distribution.
  • Keep menu design simple for device compatibility.

Common issues & quick fixes

  • Audio out of sync: re-mux audio separately or adjust audio delay in the project.
  • Playback errors on players: lower bitrate or use more compatible video/profile settings.
  • Subtitles not showing: ensure SRT is properly encoded/embedded or burn subtitles into the video.

If you want, I can produce a concise checklist you can follow while working in DivX Author or create specific export settings for a target device (e.g., DivX Player, Roku, standalone DVD player).

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