Chris King
Forum Replies Created
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Well, you can’t edit a WMV video in Final Cut Pro directly even you upgraded to FCP X. To solve the issue, you need to change the file extentsion from “.wmv” to a codec that FCP can read more easily (without rendering basically). The codec is Apple ProRes, which ensures maximum editing quality and efficiency when working with Final Cut Pro.
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Chris King
October 13, 2016 at 1:17 am in reply to: iPhone 6s Video to Handbrake to Premiere Pro (2015 Edition)Besides the frame rate, I think the H.264 codec from iPhone 6s is not supported well by Adobe Premiere. You need to encode the H.264 to Premiere Pro edit-freidnly format first.
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Just need this ProRes Encoder for Windows and then convert your Premiere Pro output to ProRes on Windows PC.
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Solution 1(only for FCP 7 users): Put BPAV folder to another folder and rename it.
Solution 2: The second common way we fond out is to install Sony XDCAM Transfer application.
Solution 3: The final workaround we got is to encode the MP4 within the BPAV file to ProRoes for FCP.
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Yes. Adobe Premiere Pro now cant deal with XAVC codec fine. The way I work my XAVC files in Ppro is to change XAVC to MPEG-2 or other editing friendly format. Click here, you can get some clues for editing Sony FS7 XAVC in Premiere Pro.
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First, you can try to copy the .VOB files from your DVD(home made without copy protection) to your computer, then change the .VOB extension to .MPG and import. Usually Adobe Premiere could accept the files.
Well, for those commercial DVDs, you need to move the copy protection and convert DVD to Adobe Premiere Pro editable file type. To convert DVD movies to Adobe PP, a DVD ripping tool is needed.
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Here is tutorial on how to import video to Final Cut Pro X no matter from camera, SD Card, Flash drive, external hard drive, or other storage device. Link to it, you can find something you want.
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Chris King
July 21, 2016 at 8:56 am in reply to: Decrypting/Converting .TiVo Files for Vegas CompatibilityThe reason the TiVo file is not supported by Sony Vegas is because only a handful of programs currently support .tivo files in their native format, which is MPEG-2 based, but in what someone described as being in a “.tivo wrapper.” You will need a program that will work with it in that form, or else removes it so that it will be recognizable by other video software.
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Actually, Avid can output Quicktime codecs, HDV, XDCAM MXF OP1a, DV, AVI, Windows Media, but MPEG-2 is not supported. A quick workaround to export MPEG-2 from Avid is to export uncompressed preferably QuickTime from Avid Media Composer and use a video program to create MPEG-2 video for creating DVD.
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It might be hard to find someone with direct post-production experience with media in MKV containers. This is not a common professional format at all. To edit MKV in After Effects, a good suggestion is encode MKV to AE edit-friendly format before importing.