- Platform: Mac OS X
- Media: CD-ROM
- Item Quantity: 1
Product Details
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Highlights of the new version:
Features
| iLife Browser Your Digital Hub | |
| DivX HD HD | ![]() |
| Motion Pictures HD | ![]() |
| Desktop Recorder Dashboard Widget Instant Capture | ![]() |
| Music DVDs | ![]() |
| Data Spanning Backup Anything | ![]() |
Copy DVDs
Compress and backup an entire 9 GB dual-layer DVD to a standard 4.7 GB DVD disc. Extract just the main movie, audio and language to maximize video quality and use of disc space. Create 9 GB disc images in iDVD and burn to affordable 4.7 GB DVDs with Toast 7.
DivX To DVD
Download DivX videos and create DVDs with drag and drop ease. Enjoy your DivX files where they deserve to be watched on the couch instead of in front of your computer. Only Toast 7 offers one-step DivX to DVD conversion.
Technical Specifications
Toast supports these input formats:
Toast supports these output formats:
DVDs created with Toast adhere 100% to the official DVD specifications, and are tested with Hollywood standard certification tools to verify DVD player compatibility.
What's in the box
The Toast 7 Titanium installation CD, including:
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
80 of 82 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Best Toast Upgrade Yet!,
By Wild West (Oregon) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Roxio Toast 7 Titanium (Mac) [Old Version] (CD-ROM)
I've used Toast since the early 90's, and this is by far the best version yet. I've always upgraded before to get nice little interface and usability upgrades, but this upgrade really is revolutionary for Toast. It takes a fantastic CD/DVD burner and adds some great totally new features:
1) Really good backup. Finally, I can backup chunks of data larger than 4.7 GB. The capacity of a standard DVD is about 4.7 GB, and I've always had to pick and choose which data to backup to fit it within that limit. But with the new Toast, they've added the ability to span a single backup across multiple DVDs. So, I can backup 10 GB, 20 GB, whatever. That's a great upgrade. 2) Easy movie DVD backup. They've added an easy, slick way to backup my movie DVDs to 4.7 GB DVD-+R. I've used the other conversion programs and they are very cumbersome. Toast makes it easy to do the conversion, and the quality is great. They worked with DivX to get the newest version of DivX that isn't even released yet for Mac. CONCLUSION: There are many, many new reasons to upgrade to Toast 7. Overall, it's one of the best upgrades yet. I only wish they offered a better deal to upgraders. Other software let's upgraders pay about 30-40% of the full price, but Toast has recently done away with upgrades, and instead does a small mail-in rebate. Oh, well, they still get my money. :-)
61 of 64 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Ultimate Disk Burning Suite,
This review is from: Roxio Toast 7 Titanium (Mac) [Old Version] (CD-ROM)
Mac OS X has some satisfactory burning tools built into the operating system, so why spend $75 on Toast 7? Well, Toast 7 does everything you wish your Mac could.
First, DVD burning. Toast allows you to import all sorts of video files, and burn them onto a video DVD, for viewing in your set-top DVD player. This is a great feature, if you have some Divx video files, on your hard drive. Drag them into the video folder in toast, and burn a video DVD. Furthermore, do you have some un-encrypted DVDs, perhaps ones made in your set-top DVD recorder with video camera footage of your family? With toast, you can import titles from those unencrypted DVDs, and put them onto a DVD, with fun and easy to navigate menus. New to Toast 7 is a great new feature that allows you to compress an unencrypted video DVD image into a size that will fit onto a single-layer disk. This basically gives you the functionality of popcorn built right into Toast 7. Data Backup - Toast works fantastic as a backup utility. There is even an application included to schedule backups on a regular basis. Toast 7 allows for disk-spanning backups, which allows you to backup many gigabytes of data over multiple DVDs or CDs. Audio - Toast 7 will obviously allow you to burn music CDs, but you can also burn a DVD. The DVD will load on a set-top DVD player, with menus, to select music, and a shuffle feature. You can get gigabytes of music onto these disks, and then play them in your DVD player. Pictures - Toast 7 includes an application called Motion Pictures HD, which allows the importing of photos to make great slideshows. They can be in beautiful widescreen, or even high-definition, if you make a Divx DVD (note that Divx DVDs can only be played in special DVD players). Import Analog Audio - CD Spin Doctor is included with Toast 7, so you can easily import analog audio via your computer's audio input. You might input audio, from a VHS tape, cassette tape, or record. Discus RE - Discus RE is a simple, but convenient way to create labels, for your DVDs. It includes the templates, for dozens of the most popular DVD labels, so then all you have to do is design your label and print it. Easy. [...] Overall, I have only had Toast 7, for a few days now. However, it might be the most useful application I have ever purchased, for my Macintosh. Toast 7 allows you to do just about anything you would want to do, when it comes to burning DVDs and CDs. Furthermore, it is easy to use. I was taking advantage of Toast 7's many features within just minutes of installing the software. Give Toast 7 a try, for it will quickly become one of the most used applications on your Mac.
32 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Tim Robertson MyMac.com Review,
By Tim E Robertson "Publisher MyMac" (Battle Creek, Mi United States) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Roxio Toast 7 Titanium (Mac) [Old Version] (CD-ROM)
Roxio Toast 7
Company: Roxio Price: $99 http://www.Roxio.com We here at MyMac.com have been reviewing Roxio Toast for years. The problem, then, is how do you review a new version that, for all intents and purposes, does not add many new real features to the software, looks the same as it did a full version ago, and is just as easy to use as it ever was? Well, perhaps it's a bit easier for me, as I did not write either of the reviews for version 5 or 6. (That would be Owen Rubin and David Weeks.) Nonetheless, let's give a look a Toast 7 for the uninitiated among you. For Mac users wondering why they would need to purchase a $99 program to burn CD's and DVD's when they get those functions with a free program (iTunes for CD's, as well as data burning within the finder) or as part of a larger software package (iLife, more specifically iDVD for DVD creation) the answer is simple: where iTunes and iDVD falls short in their simplicity, Toast gives users much more control and options. This is not always a good thing; most Mac users enjoy the simplicity in the OS and iLife. But more serious or hardcore users will find, many times, that they need more options. Toast can be used to create data back-ups, create and burn audio CD's and video DVD's, create other media discs (DivX, Super Video CDs, Video CD's, DVD's from Video-TS files) and much more. Toast plays nicely with the Mac OS, including giving the user access to iTunes libraries and playlists, the user movie library, and iPhoto, including all the photo albums therein. We will get more into the media features of Toast later in the review. The newest feature I was most looking forward to is Data Spanning. This alone, in my opinion, is the sole reason to purchase Roxio Toast 7. Archiving large files, such as the video projects I work on, is now very simple with Data Spanning. For instance, I recently worked on remastering an old wedding video for a client, converting a VHS tape to DVD, as well as creating a "highlight" DVD in the process. The finished iMovie file was 25.98GB in size. While I could simply create a copy of the finished DVD's, I also wanted to keep on hand the iMovie archive of the project, in case the client came back later wanting to do something different with the footage. But how to archive almost 26GB of data? Sure, external FireWire drives would work, but I don't want to take up valuable hard disk space for a file I may never need again. Much more convenient to simply archive it to data CDs or DVDs. But the file is too large to fit onto either of those media. Data Spanning solves this easily. I simply drag the file in question to the open Toast window, and the program will tell me how many discs I need, depending upon what media I will be using. In this instance, Toast informs me that I will need 6 blank DVDs, or 38 blank CD's, to archive the project. A ten pack of blank DVD's will only set me back five bucks, which is much cheaper than taking up storage space on an external hard drive. Data Spanning, however, only works with Mac discs, not Mac and PC, so keep that in mind. Toast has the ability to copy home brewed DVD's with ease. While the program will not allow you to copy copy-protected discs, such as movies you rent, you can copy those you made in iDVD. This came in handy for me a short time ago, as I had lost all my iAtariMac MacMOD files. Just gone. My only option was to grab the low quality files from the Internet. But thanks to Chad Perry, who had MacMOD on DVD, I simply copied his DVD. As I said, Toast is unable to make copies of any DVD with Macrovision encryption, meaning commercial movie DVDs. So what's a person to do if they want to copy their own DVDs? For me, I used MacTheRipper, a free program, to copy an entire DVD to my hard drive, stripping out the encryption at the same time. Then I used Toast to burn a regular DVD from that file, and viola! - an instant copy of my movie. While you could also do the same thing with rented DVDs, that would be stealing, and we don't condone that here at MyMac.com, of course. The interface of Toast 7 is the same as the previous version, which is a good thing. If something is not broken, there's no need to fix it. Toast uses a tabbed interface, which includes Data (data backups, copying data, etc.), Audio (to create music CD's, with many more options than you get from iTunes), Video (see above), and Copy (self explanatory). Each tab will bring up different options with a slide-out left preference pane, so that you can adjust or tweak different options as needed. For instance, the Data pane will show different types of disc you can burn, such as a Mac-only disc or a Mac and PC disc. The preference pane also links to the iLife media on your Mac, giving you quick and easy drag and drop access to your files. You can author your own DVD menus using Toast 7, although I haven't spent much time doing so. It seems fairly straightforward, but after a cursory playing with this feature, I simply found iDVD much easier and intuitive to use. With Toast 7, you can download DivX video files, drag them into Toast, and create DVDs playable on your home entertainments DVD player. As Roxio touts on their website, this lets you watch videos where you really want to; on your coach, watching the television, not on your computer monitor. All in all, I am very impressed with this new version of Roxio Toast. It has become my disc burning solution of choice. Well worth the money for those needing to create easy backups, archiving, and much more. MyMac.com Rating: 5 out of 5
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