Well, it's quite easy.
1. Download genisoimage 1.1.8 from Debian repository; You can get it at 
http://packages.debian.org/lenny/genisoimage. 1.1.7 is no longer available as a 
Debian package.
2. Install genisoimage 1.1.8 using Gdebi (for instance). You simply need to 
double click on the package file and it will launch the right app. Simply 
ignore the security warning that Gdebi will give, about this package not being 
part of an official Ubuntu repository
3. Once genisoimage is installed, you need to create an iso file containing 
video DVD data. One way is to rip a chapter from another video DVD for 
instance. I personnaly use k9copy for that, but there are plenty of other ways
4. After the iso file is created on your hard disk, you can burn a DVD with it. 
Prefer using a DVD+/-RW, in order not a waste a blank one in case of failure
5. Use a computer with Windows on it and test whether it can list the content 
of the burned DVD (VIDEO_TS and AUDIO_TS directories) or not
6. Report your findings here

Thank you  !

-- 
genisoimage generates wrong DVD-Video images
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/233942
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