Jeremy Rasnic
Forum Replies Created
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Render out to a proxy file. That will allow for fluid playback.
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Also, see if this may be your issue: https://www.rlvision.com/misc/windows_7_font_bug.asp
j razz
https://www.jrazzcreations.com
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Did you check if you changed something using “Ease of Access” within Windows 7? I am assuming you are using Windows 7.
It sounds like you may have adjusted your DPI. Is it just within Vegas or all programs started doing this after the upgrade?
j razz
https://www.jrazzcreations.com
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Jeremy Rasnic
November 10, 2011 at 3:03 am in reply to: What format is best quality to render out a chroma clip to then bring back into the project – renderedUncompressed AVI will be your best bet… but you will need a lot of hard drive space- especially if they are large clips.
j razz
https://www.jrazzcreations.com
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Jeremy Rasnic
September 21, 2011 at 5:32 pm in reply to: Rendering times longer than normal…thoughts?You are correct in both assumptions above. As a simple test, remove the fx from the event (clip) and do a test render. Speeds should dramatically improve. In addition, you will want to check to make sure you didn’t bump the opacity slider on the track. Anything less than 100% will drastically increase render times.
Let us know how it turns out.
j razz
https://www.jrazzcreations.com
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Perhaps. You may want to run this by Sony support. If you choose to do that, let us know the outcome. here is the link: Sony Technical Support
You will need an account if you don’t already have one.
j razz
https://www.jrazzcreations.com
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Yes. I don’t know if a free script is available for this but I know that Ultimate S by VASST will do this and a whole lot more. I also think that Excalibur by JetDV can do this as well.
j razz
https://www.jrazzcreations.com
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Try a system restore point before uninstalling. Sometimes those can save a headache or two 🙂
j razz
https://www.jrazzcreations.com
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I don’t know how to turn this off within Vegas, but I would think you would be able to apply the classic Windows theme and turn off all animations via Windows and see if that is really the culprit. If that fixes the issue, it is either a throughput issue or a RAM issue. I would doubt that it is a gpu issue. If that does take care of it, try turning off some background processes to reduce the amount of items running on your system. Start/Run/msconfig go to the startup tab and turn off those items that are not essential to run. If you uncheck them all that is okay as Windows will turn back on what needs to be running for the system. You can also do the same for services. Once you restart it will tell you that you have enabled selective startup or something like that. You can check the box telling it to not tell you this again.
Now you can turn back on your themes and animations and test again. If all is well you can bring back your services and startup items one (or a group) at a time to see if one in particular is the issue or if there is a breaking point. Keep an eye on your task manager. Hope this helps.
j razz
https://www.jrazzcreations.com
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Try this: Right click the video file, choose Insert/Remove Envelope. Apply the velocity envelope to the video event. Double click the line that appears to add a node to it. Double click again further down the line and place nodes wherever you want them. Click and drag a node to ramp up or down the speed of the video.
Since I am not in front of my editing system right now, I cannot test to ensure that this will affect the audio, but I think it does.
If you do not have a video event attached to the audio, drag a video file to the timeline and ctrl select both the video and audio and then press G on your keyboard to group them.
Let us know if this worked for you.
j razz
https://www.jrazzcreations.com