Article: First, you need a blank disc you can burn your video to. You can buy a blank DVD from any audio or electronics store for less than $1 per disc or $10 per 10-piece packs.  Use this method if you want to save the video's file to a DVD but don't plan to watch the movie on a DVD player. You can still watch the movie on computers with DVD-ROM drives by inserting the finished DVD and double-clicking the video file. You can choose between two disc sizes: 4GB or 8GB. A 4 GB disc is about enough for a movie-length video of an hour and a half; any longer, and you’ll need to use the 8 GB. This drive is located in front of a CPU tower or along the sides of a laptop, depending on the make and model. Press the button on the drive to open it and insert the disc inside. If your computer doesn't have a CD/DVD drive, like netbooks, you can use an external CD/DVD drive instead, which you can purchase from any computer or electronics shop for around $20. There’s no need to install it; just plug it into any USB port on your computer and you can start using it. After you’ve inserted the DVD into the drive, a small auto-run window will appear on your desktop asking what you want to do with the DVD. After you click on Burn, a “Burn a disc” window will open.  If the window does not popup, you can navigate to your video file in File Explorer, right-click it, then click Send and select your DVD drive (might be D:).  Most Windows computers come with built-in software to burn CD/DVDs. You can also use Windows Media Player, which works similarly if you don't have Windows 10. You'll be typing in a small "Burn a Disc" window. Make sure to select “With a CD/DVD player” option. This will allow your disc to be readable on DVD players and computers. Click Next to continue. This will open your DVD drive in a new window as the files you selected previously are copied to the CD/DVD burner drive. You'll want to open it and select the video file. Once you’ve selected the video file, drag it over to the DVD drive window. This will copy the selected video files to your DVD, ready for burning. You'll find this along the top of the pop-up window. This is usually the second option in the list, under "Eject." The process of burning your video to a DVD might take a few minutes, depending on the length of your video. The disc should automatically eject from the drive once finished.

What is a summary?
Get a blank DVD. Put the blank DVD in your computer’s CD/DVD drive. Click Burn. Type in any name you want for the DVD in the text field provided. Navigate to the folder where the video you want to burn is located. Click the Drive Tools tab. Click Finish Burning.