Forum Replies Created

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  • For use with HD video a good video card and an I5 or I7 Intel processor is best. AMD quad cores work too.
    Does your machine play back HD video at full screen without glitching or audio video sync issues?
    Playing back inside an NLE can be troublesome. Vegas gives you the option to use lower res playback for working on the video. It will still render at the quality you select when you render.

  • Steven Talley

    February 9, 2012 at 4:19 am in reply to: Sony Vegas Pro 11.0 Rendering Problems

    Have you tried rendering to another format? Iv’e seen a problem with rendering to some formats in HD. Don’t know what the problem is but it will probably be fixed in a newer version of 11.

  • Steven Talley

    February 9, 2012 at 4:10 am in reply to: Rendering Problem

    It may be that it’s running out of hard drive space to save the rendered video.

  • Steven Talley

    February 5, 2012 at 5:32 am in reply to: Best Combination for Sony Vegas and Price?

    For HD I’d look at the I7 – 2630qm or 2670qm with nvidia graphics for Cuda support. Quad cores will get you faster rendering times. Lenovo makes some interesting machines.

  • Steven Talley

    January 28, 2012 at 2:54 pm in reply to: Vegas Pro 9

    Try
    https://www.stuckincustoms.com
    Trey Radcliff’s web site for information on creating HDR photography.

  • Steven Talley

    January 26, 2012 at 6:12 am in reply to: How To Reduce “Breaths/Inhales” Using Soundbooth

    The gate will only take out noise in low volume areas, once the volume is high it cannot touch any noise in the mix, that’s what you use the noise print removal for. EQing the mix in parts might help in noise reduction too. I’d use the noise removal first and then the gate. But it may work better the opposite way too. Compress/Limit and then normalize as the final step. Trial and error.

  • Steven Talley

    January 21, 2012 at 2:57 am in reply to: How To Reduce “Breaths/Inhales” Using Soundbooth

    Just by adding compression you have raised the level of the breathing noises, so I’d look at adding a gate to the VO track and adjust to taste. It may work better with uncompressed audio so the levels for the breaths will be lower and sound more natural.
    I’m using Soundbooth 3.0 from CS5 so an earlier version may be different. Soundbooth has a gate in it’s Dynamics (Advanced) settings.
    Best bet is to set it manually and play with the settings to get it to sound right. Soundbooths help file has a starting point to help you understand where to begin.
    Good Luck
    Steve

  • Steven Talley

    January 20, 2012 at 2:07 am in reply to: SONY VEGAS 10 aviplug dll crash

    As long as the original is named using .dl? and not an L, Vegas will not see it and try to load it.

  • Steven Talley

    January 18, 2012 at 3:32 pm in reply to: SONY VEGAS 10 aviplug dll crash

    Try replacing the aviplug.dll with this one from an earlier thread,
    https://f1.creativecow.net/1447/32bit-aviplugdll-to-fix-problem
    To keep the original file but not load it just rename it to aviplug.dl1 or something similar before dropping the new aviplug.dll into the plugin folder. Do a search for the file name to find where the replacement file needs to go.

  • Steven Talley

    January 18, 2012 at 3:29 pm in reply to: Capturing audio from Flash Player

    Depending on the sound card or chip used in your computer you can tell the audio mixer to record any sounds that are played back through the machine in real time.
    Open the audio mixer and select wave, stereo mix or audio out to be recorded then open Audition to record.
    You may need to select the audio out under preferences in Audition also. It all depends on what your computer audio hardware is capable of.

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