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beginner here: video in preview window jumpy
Hi,
I am editing mp4’s (something about .264 is in the format name too) —
They play wonderfully in Windows Media Player (but they don’t play well in any other media player). However, when I import into Vegas, they play as if they are a series of still photos rather than a smooth continuous video.I have a Pentium R (M) 1.20gig processor and 1.24gigs of RAM, which I guess is considered “slow” for video editing* so maybe that’s the problem. But then, why do the videos play so well when they are not in the editor?
(*for those of us who have lived a rather longish time, this seems absurd, doesn’t it? haven’t people been editing video with MUCH slower machines for years?)
I am shooting with a Sanyo Xacti HD1000, but I have given up on HD for the moment. I am experimenting with what the camera menu calls “TV quality”: “TV-SHQ” and/or “TV HR” (both 640X480, one is 60fps, one is 30fps.)
As I say, they both play great in Win Med Player but not when I import them into Vegas.
I am experimenting with a whole bunch of project settings when I import, but I wonder if anyone has any suggestions for the best settings. Basically I’m trying setting that seem logical for these files. (720X480 are on the list, so I”ve tried that, and I’ve also “customized” it to 640 X480 but it’s always the same shakiness).
On the other side of things, I can play tiny files (“web” resolution, I forget the numbers) just fine in the Vegas preview window, edit them, and could go wild on You Tube, but I would like to produce TV-quality video, burn to a DVD, etc.
I was thinking about getting the program Gearshift to convert to something more editable in my computer, but I see that Gearshift is for HD. I wonder if the “TV” files I’m trying to edit in now are the same sort of resolution that Gearshift converts TO for editing, or, would Gearshift (or some other program) shift the format “down” even further so that I can see the files nicely in the Vegas preview window for editing? I wonder if I should/could convert these “tv quality” files to those tiny “web-type” ones (oh I see it’s 320×240, 15fps), edit them that way, and then blow them up again? The kind of projects I’m doing are not of a level where complete precision is necessary — this is for amateur use.
Thank you for any help.
Liz