

#IDVD WON T BURN HOW TO#
Here’s how to get hold of it and what it can do.īurning a DVD is a complex task. My son recently played in a piano concert and he wanted to burn a DVD of the concert for his grandfather. Hope that helps a bit.if you do decide to get the Production Suite, look online and note the minimum system req for each program so you are sure you can run them.We live in a post-DVD world now but there are still occasions where you may need to burn a DVD. Apple's online store offers student discounts, so if yer a student you can get the Final Cut Production Suite for only $499!!! thats about a 60% discount.i'm sure Final Cut Express would be even less than $300 with the student discount as well. I would note that if you are merely going to import footage and do little in regards to filters/effects/etc. i simply import it in whatever format it is, and not as HD.
#IDVD WON T BURN PRO#
however, i still use Final Cut Pro HD for the footage i import. re: converting DV to HiDef-h_vargas is right.in order to truly make something HD, the footage would've had to have been shot on a HD Camera. as a film student & former audio recording junkie, mac is the way to go in both worlds.final cut is very similar to premiere, but i find it a bit more "professional".
#IDVD WON T BURN PC#
as a former PC user who switched to Mac, let me tell you-SWITCH TO MAC!!! far less errors, crashes, security problems, hack attempts, spam, adware, etc.Ģ. just boost the file size.īut if i'm off base on this, someone please point me to the light!ġ. i would think the same holds true for upsampling video resolution - it may not "lose" quality, but it won't really gain quality either. i mean, it's like if you take a typical Redbook WAV file at 16/44.1 and upsample it to 24/48, it's not going to sound "better" because the source material was captured at the lower bit-depth/resolution. i may be way off base here, but i don't see any advantage of upsampling standard DV (720x480) to HD resolution. that has its headquarters in Texas, i believe, it is.Īs for final cut pro hd letting users go from DV to HD with no quality loss, that's interesting. and curiously enough, they were all made by the same big computer corp. Wilson, just out of curiosity, was your PC that died a pre-built machine you bought (like from one of those big name computer corporations)? just curious, as i read about several people who have "small businesses" using PCs/Premiere for video editing having their PCs die on them this past year. If you don't do dubbing that has to be exact like concerts then iMovie is fine and FCE/P you would prob only use for mixing angles If you want to do dubbing right now the best bet would be to get FCE/Pĭepending on what youuse to burn iDVD will work IDVD 5 has new menus and allows you to do chapters but it usually hasa fixed bit rateįCE/P HD i never worked with but based on iMovie HD its the same as thenormal version just tweaked to work with HD video too Pro comes with Shake though, never used itĭVDSP 1 is cool but 2 killlls it, 2 has menus built in, the rest is basically the same i think IMovie 2 is the best iMovie for dubbing because it lets you move frame by frameįC express is a low scale version of Pro-for the most part Pro is over kill IMovie HD which i hate and wish i hadn't trashed iMovie 4 for it - because it will not open a older project without converting it and screwing it up

I have a mac and i have/worked with iMovie 2 - had 3 and 4 but for dubbing they suck
