Terry Esslinger
Forum Replies Created
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Edward – Happy New Year!
I’ve never had this question answered to where I understand it. Probably a malfunction at my end.
Does it matter what kind of “TV” you are renderering for? A lot of comments are made that use interlaced for TV and progressive for computer monitors. But are not TVs becoming more like computer monitors? Does it matter if your final project is going to be viewed on a CRT tv or on an LCD or plasma tv? Do you render differently. What if you do not know and all you know is that it is for TV viewing?
Thanks for all the time you give to this and many other forums.
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You are probably seeing the computer not being able to keep up with the material. If you are seeing this in your preview window and your setting is anything but preview automatic, change it to that. The quality of the preview takes a hit but it can usually keep up. Also check to see how much memory you have reserved for ram previews. You might try changing that to 0 and see if the problem disappears. You would have to change it back to something decent if you were going to do a ram preview. I’m betting that if you take your time line and render it out that the ‘drop outs’ would not be there.
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Insert your text event. Size the font. Hit placement tab and move letters off side of screen (outt of sight) whic will set first keyframe. Then hit last keyframe indicator and move text to opposite side of screen and out of sight. Set time for event to adjust speed. Play your event. should have large (or small) fonts rolling from one side to another and out of sight.
Terry Esslinger
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Render your video in Vegas as MPEG2 and the audio as AC3 (two separate files). Then take those files into Architect and create your DVD. If this is your first and you don’t need a menu, use the single movie option.
Terry Esslinger
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From a dummy –
Terry Esslinger
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Terry Esslinger
April 3, 2006 at 4:47 am in reply to: Vegas crashes while rendering a session containing embedded sessionsUsing 6.0c I just finished a project about 60min long consisting of 13 embedded .veg on the time line. Added transitions between them, added markers (regions I believe) at the beginning of each and rendered as mpeg2 and AC3 and imported into DVD and used the markers for chapters in a menu. Worked great. So it does work, at least with”c”. Have been afraid to upgrade to “d” with all the things I have heard and “c” seems to be working great.
Only problem was when I tried to “save as” alomng with trimmed media to save as a back up in case I needed to go back to the project later, Vegas did not save the media that was imbedded in the .vegs.Terry Esslinger
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Sorry, Yes Audacity.
Terry Esslinger
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Terry Esslinger
April 1, 2006 at 7:37 pm in reply to: Help Please – (trying to put my Vegas projects in backup folders or on dvd)Just a thought, Have you tried restoring your system to a system restore point sometime before this problem started occuring?
Terry Esslinger
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If you don’t have Sound Forge you could download the free audio editor Audicity and use the noise reduction feature in it. Works pretty well but use judiciously as can cause some wierd sounds if overused.
Terry Esslinger
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Terry Esslinger
March 28, 2006 at 12:13 am in reply to: Mini input coming in extremely loud and saturated!Just go to Radio Shack and ask for one. They are cheap.
Terry Esslinger