There must have been an issue when Scott swapped the command line tool executables comprised within his wrap-up .exe
Besides, I happened to bump into another issue, probably unrelated, trying DVD-Audiofile with a 24/96 test file. I got "the files in the list must match in sample rate and size. You tried to add a 24bit/96000 Hz file" while dvda-author did its job all right on command line.
Scott, could you possibly give your app a twist so that it unzips with a \bin subfolder, with mkisofs and dvda-author-08.07 in it ? Your main executable would launch the binaries under \bin when necessary. This would ease the upgrading process both for authors and users. Thanks in advance for this.
For all intents and purposes, I just uploaded a new Windows installer on the DVD-Audio tools webpage. It's just a slight twist, but it may come in handy. Now, when you click on the Windows menu link (START -> Programs ->dvda-author-08.07 -> dvda-author) (orange DVD-A icon) a command-line console opens. Just type in:
dvda-author -i (full path to your soundfiles directory) -o (full path to your output DVD directory)
example :
dvda-author -i C:\soundfiles -o C:\DVD-A
Your soundfiles directory should be organized with subfolders g1, g2, ... etc, g9, for group 1, group 2, ... group 9 (put in as many gN as there should be groups in your DVD-A).
There should only be subfolders g1, etc, in your soundfiles directory, without any extra material. In each g1, g2, etc, just put in your audio files.
example:
C:\soundfiles\g1\file1.wav
C:\soundfiles\g1\file2.flac
C:\soundfiles\g1\file3.wav
C:\soundfiles\g2\file1.wav
C:\soundfiles\g3\file1.wav
C:\soundfiles\g3\file2.flac