That is a disc. You need a dual-layer burner and a dual-layer blank DVD (DVD+R DL). Alternatively, use software like DVD Shrink (old but gold) to compress it to a single layer. Note: Compression reduces video quality.
In an era dominated by algorithmic streaming and ephemeral cloud storage, the physical media of the recent past—specifically the Digital Versatile Disc (DVD)—faces a quiet obsolescence. As optical drives disappear from laptops and manufacturers cease production, vast libraries of interactive software, supplementary film features, and unique digital ephemera risk permanent loss. However, a crucial preservation effort resides in an unlikely place: the collections of DVD ISO images hosted on Archive.org. These raw, sector-by-sector copies of discs serve not merely as backups but as vital historical artifacts, encapsulating the unique user experience of the DVD era. An examination of these ISO collections reveals a complex interplay of technical preservation, legal grey areas, and the democratization of access to digital archaeology, solidifying Archive.org’s role as a modern-day Library of Alexandria for optical media.
option under the "Download Options" sidebar on a specific item's page.
The original, uncompressed MPEG-2 streams. Menus: The interactive navigation screens.