Brad Wright
Forum Replies Created
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Wow, I blew the html link code. Anyways, here’s the article link:
https://www.lafcpug.org/Tutorials/basic_hdvideo_to_dvd.html
Brad Wright is software engineer, so it may be difficult to understand what he is saying. He is always happy to explain his greater detail.
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I would get the i7. Compressor is very efficient at using multiple cpu cores.
Brad Wright is software engineer, so it may be difficult to understand what he is saying. He is always happy to explain his greater detail.
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Brad Wright
November 24, 2011 at 5:16 am in reply to: Problems importing old Adobe avi files into Final Cut Pro 7It depends on the platform. I know that Quicktime supports screen recording, but there are other third party options out there. On the Mac, I use Screen Flow.
Brad Wright is software engineer, so it may be difficult to understand what he is saying. He is always happy to explain his greater detail.
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Take a look at this article I wrote. It explains how to get the best transfer from HD to DVD.
Brad Wright is software engineer, so it may be difficult to understand what he is saying. He is always happy to explain his greater detail.
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Trash your Final Cut preferences files. Here’s how from Larry Jordan.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9sDXZQSnIys
Brad Wright is software engineer, so it may be difficult to understand what he is saying. He is always happy to explain his greater detail.
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Brad Wright
November 23, 2011 at 6:53 pm in reply to: Problems importing old Adobe avi files into Final Cut Pro 7Is there any program that can play the video back correctly? If you can find it, you might be able to do a screen record of the video playing full screen.
Brad Wright is software engineer, so it may be difficult to understand what he is saying. He is always happy to explain his greater detail.
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DV video is 14 gigabytes per hour. H.264 compression can be any size. You never want to use H.264 as an intermediate codec that is something that you want to edit. Only encode with H.264 for web viewing. For editing, use ProRes or the Apple Intermediate Codec.
Brad Wright is software engineer, so it may be difficult to understand what he is saying. He is always happy to explain his greater detail.
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Brad Wright
November 23, 2011 at 3:31 pm in reply to: Problems importing old Adobe avi files into Final Cut Pro 7You’ll likely need to convert these files to another codec. Do you see the problem when you play the video back in Quicktime?
Brad Wright is software engineer, so it may be difficult to understand what he is saying. He is always happy to explain his greater detail.
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So if the problem isn’t in the ProRes file, you need to modify your Compressor settings. After you create the ProRes file import that file into Compressor. Drag your H.264 export setting you want to use on top of the file. Click on the inspector. Click on the encoder tab in the inspector. Click on the audio settings button. Change the Target Bit Rate to 320. Submit and see if the problem goes away.
Brad Wright is software engineer, so it may be difficult to understand what he is saying. He is always happy to explain his greater detail.
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Most likely it’s your audio settings. I would import the ProRes video into Compressor and modify the AAC audio encoding for the H.264. This is likely where the problem is.
Brad Wright is software engineer, so it may be difficult to understand what he is saying. He is always happy to explain his greater detail.