Often, when you insert a CD into the drive, a menu appears on your monitor display, revealing the contents of the media using a beautiful graphical interface. To create such an autorun menu (or autorun), it is absolutely not necessary to be a computer genius, you just need to use some programs and instructions.
Necessary
AutoPlay Media Studio
Instructions
Step 1
To get started, download the 30-day free version of AutoPlay Media Studio from this link https://www.indigorose.com/autoplay-media-studio/free-trial.php. Then install it. When you start AutoPlay Media Studio will offer you several options to work with. Select the Create a new project option. Click on the Blank Project button and specify the name of your future project, which will later be displayed in the menu window. To get started, select the Create project now option.
Step 2
To set the background in the Page menu, find the Properties option, in the Background section in the Image item, click on Browse and select the required background image. Add navigation tools to autorun by going to the Object menu and using the Button option. Change the properties of the button to your liking by double-clicking on it. Items such as Text, Alignment, State colors will appear, which are responsible for the content of the text, its position and color on the button, respectively. In order for certain events to occur when you click on the created button, go to the Quick Action section and apply an action to the object, for example, Play Multimedia to play media files.
Step 3
After you complete your autorun project, proceed to compiling it. To do this, in the Publish section, click on the Build button. To save the menu project to your computer, select the Hard drive folder option or burn it to a CD using the Burn data CD / DVD mode. In the Output folder line, mark the folder where you plan to save the project, then click on the Build button. When the compilation process is complete, a folder with finished projects will appear. To write the autorun menu to a CD, you just need to copy the finished files onto it.