View Full Version : Creating a DVD that displays in Hi Def on a Blu-Ray player
Larry Horwitz September 4th, 2008, 08:40 AM I run Edius on Vista 64. It's only Canopus hardware that isn't supported. The software products work just fine. It is necessary to set up the converter first before use so that the conversion parameters are set and the directory used also set.
There is a big difference in needs for a home video needing no changes other than maybe a title at the front etc and the needs of a professional/prosumer or hobby like mine that need to edit a 4 camera shoot of a event of over 2 hours in high definition shot on different cameras. I always have to colour balance some of the cameras. For the tape based HDV the capture is realtime, for the AVCHD its about the same ( advantage is I don't have the problem of tape changing and it mixes well with the FX1's used).
As I have said, anyone buying a Sony AVCHD doesn't really need to buy anything else to produce SD DVD's or AVCHD DVD's as the Sony Browser software is adequate for a beginners needs. As to the large file sizes anyone used to editing HDV with Cineform or Canopus HQ is well aware of the advantages in using an intermediate file format rather than the long GOP whether that is MPEG2 or H262 based.
I do also believe that when the new range of cameras come out AVCHD will displace some of the HDV. For weddings and events not having to change tapes over a long period of time, being able to instantly review clips, have easy clip management on transfer to PC etc etc will be a big advantage. I can see that Sony will need to bring out a competitive product to the new Panasonic, maybe a fixed lens version of the Z7 or similar and I for one will likely buy one. Bluray or hard drive backup is just fine. Cost of Bluray is really no more than long standard size DV/HDV tapes( in fact a little cheaper at the moment). I just backed up 5 hours of AVCHD on a 50G Bluray for $37. Tape equivalent( large standard tape) could not hold as long a time and is $45.
Ron Evans
Ron,
Please elaborate as to how to set up the convertor first before use. There is no ducomentation provided in that specific topic nor is there any obvious way to adjust settings of the convertor once using it.
Only time will tell how AVCHD will truly evolve. With disk space and especially flash memory becoming so extremely cheap, it makes less sense to capture HD with cameras that struggle with motion artifacts and compression workloads demanded by AVCHD. I actually could envision a totally lossless or far less lossy eventual successor to these very highly compressed capture methods, but who really knows?
As regards BluRay versus tape, I am just plain old fashion. I have literally thousands of DVDs I've made here in various stages of rot after only a few years, some of them used brand name blanks, so I am altogether skeptical of optical storage longevity and stability. I generally prefer harddisk backups, where your 50 GB example might cost me 7 to 10 dollars versus your $37. I also hate to wait for recording, rendering, etc. (probably a sign of the retirement age I have reached (-: ) but I especially like to write my 50 GB backup in seconds rather than many minutes or even hours for a BluRay duallayer disk disk you used as an example. As the prices come down on BluRay blanks I may switch back to optical again for archiving.
Larry
Kaushik Parmar September 4th, 2008, 08:49 AM Steve,
Nero is worth playing with, and demonstrates the claims of speed and quality I have been ranting about. No doubt you will (as I did) find it almost comically spartan in terms of its features, and yet I find myself using it often just to quickly get the job done.
Bad analogy, but it's like the large drill press I have in my shop here. It's a wonderful, beautifully made, very competent drill, but yet I always seem to grab and use my little hand-held battery-operated drill whenever I have a hole to drill....
My Cyberlink PowerDirector 7 experiences are mixed regarding quality. In the original and first updated releases, there was no smart rendering of AVCHD, and the finished disks really looked poor. Then in the latest Build 1915 AVCHD smart rendering was implemented, worked correctly, and made a very visible improvement in their resulting disks. Only problem is that the Build 1915, at least on my machine, has a lot of bugs, including bugs in burning disks which did not exist in prior builds. I thus have to use a different program to burn the AVCHD image since PowerDirector 7 crashes during burning.
When (and if) they figure out how to get PD7 to run properly, it will be a very nice program for the money. I dinged it heavily on the magazine website where Jan Ozer rated it as the best of the current low cost editing suites, particularly since his review was of the original release, a bug-ridden POS in my opinion.
Larry
I am fully agreed with you Larry; your observation regarding PowerDirector 7, indeed it is great for beginner! And it is so simple to use. I was so much exited about new version PD7, but I am much disappointed with it, first of all it is same not much different, they try to give more professional look like and they succeed, now it looks better!
But it crashed so many times; even I downloaded some patches as well but no improvement.
They have added very nice features in slideshow part, full marks to CyberLink for such innovative features!
I made some slideshows with PD7 and here is link if someone is like to see: JVC GZ-HD7 slideshow on Vimeo (http://www.vimeo.com/1639491)
Philips @ IFA 2008, Berlin on Vimeo (http://www.vimeo.com/1636736)
Kaushik
Larry Horwitz September 4th, 2008, 08:57 AM Yes, CyberLink's PowerDirector 7 is worst if we try to produce AVCHD, means AVC.MPEG4. But I simply love PowerDirector 7, I have made some nice slideshow with it if some one is interested here is link: JVC GZ-HD7 slideshow on Vimeo (http://www.vimeo.com/1639491)
Philips @ IFA 2008, Berlin on Vimeo (http://www.vimeo.com/1636736)
Kaushik,
Your two movies show the very nice ability of PD7 to do many different effects and picture-in-picture, and this is probably why it got the highest rating by PC Magazine / Jan Ozer since it allows for spectacular effects. (I wish I was able to attend that Berlin show you visitied!)
AVCHD is the area where PD7 is so weak. It has not been tested and debugged properly, and the support from Cyberlink is poor. My comments and complaints were strictly as an AVCHD user. I will also mention that their earlier version PD6 was pretty poor with HDV, so I don't respect their quality at all.
The latest patcher on their website to the new build is quite an improvement in some areas, but a step back in others. This is another sign of their weak software quality. The program is still a bargain if someone knows how to work around the various issues.
Larry
Mark Bausch September 4th, 2008, 09:32 AM ...to the knowledgable posters in this thread. Thanks for all of your important information--I hope to be able to purchase some gear and look forward to sharing parts of my efforts with you on this board.
Please continue the dialog...we're reading and learning out here in beginner-land.
Kaushik Parmar September 4th, 2008, 10:44 AM Kaushik,
Your two movies show the very nice ability of PD7 to do many different effects and picture-in-picture, and this is probably why it got the highest rating by PC Magazine / Jan Ozer since it allows for spectacular effects. (I wish I was able to attend that Berlin show you visitied!)
AVCHD is the area where PD7 is so weak. It has not been tested and debugged properly, and the support from Cyberlink is poor. My comments and complaints were strictly as an AVCHD user. I will also mention that their earlier version PD6 was pretty poor with HDV, so I don't respect their quality at all.
The latest patcher on their website to the new build is quite an improvement in some areas, but a step back in others. This is another sign of their weak software quality. The program is still a bargain if someone knows how to work around the various issues.
Larry
Yes Larry, PD7 has some innovative features in slideshow part; it has so many options also for creating nice slideshow. And I love to watch in to big screen via projector! And other end it required much improvement in videos editing part, but I am sure CyberLink's creative team is aware about this and will come out soon with more strength!
But I really love PD7, despite of some error!
Kaushik
Ron Evans September 4th, 2008, 01:46 PM Hi Larry
There should be three icons on the desktop for the converter. AVCHD2HQ, AVCHDPRV, and HQ codec setup. Under the setup its possible to set for standard or fine conversion and alter the parameters though standard is the one I use. One can also set whether the conversion is to ITU601 or from RGB ( 0-255 to IRE 0 to 100). If you drag a file over the preview icon it will play in a preview window, Opening the AVCHD2HQ will allow you to set whether the sound conversion is to 2 channel or 5.1. When you make this selection another box will open allowing you to choose the directory for the converted file. I make sure the directory for the converted file is on another hard drive from the source file, much faster. Once this is set dragging a file over the ICON will use these set parameters until you change them. The problem with defaults for Sony and Edius etc is that they are all on the boot drive and so this poor drive has to keep swapping back and for as well as manage all the access that Windows wants!!!! Don't use the boot drive for any of the video source or destination. For me a PC needs 4 drives for nice clean video performance. boot, temp and preview, and two for storage.
Ron
Larry Horwitz September 4th, 2008, 01:49 PM Yes Larry, PD7 has some innovative features in slideshow part; it has so many options also for creating nice slideshow. And I love to watch in to big screen via projector! And other end it required much improvement in videos editing part, but I am sure CyberLink's creative team is aware about this and will come out soon with more strength!
But I really love PD7, despite of some error!
Kaushik
Kaushik,
I really hope they fix the remaining bugs since most of PD7 is really very well done, and their slideshow features are excellent as your samples demonstrate.
If you have a projector connected directly to a computer and can display computer video without using mpeg / h.264 encoding, I can also recomend another very low cost slideshow program developed in Russia which makes outstanding slideshows, is very low cost, and makes either high def AVI / mpeg files, and also executable .exe files which display full photo resolution content without any mpeg / h.264 degredation. Of the dozen or more slideshow programs I have been experimenting with over the last few years, it has become one of my favorites. It is called MySlideShowGold from Anix Software. I have worked with the developer, Andrew Anoshkin, on a couple beta releases to help him debug it. If you like slideshows, you should check out the trial version. See:
MySlideShow - software for creating slide shows, photo albums, screen savers, presentations, video files, VideoCD and DVD (http://www.anixsoft.com/myslideshow.html)
Best,
Larry
Steve Mullen September 4th, 2008, 07:37 PM Last night I got Vegas 9 Plat up and running. Very nice for $85.
BUT
Sony seems to have designed its export options to force one to buy DVD ARCH 5.
1) AVCHD uses AC3 or stereo PCM. Sony does not support AC3! And, if you have made a 5.1 soundtrack -- a really neat feature of Vegas -- you are forced to burn a multi-channel LPCM track. Unfortunately, this track cannot be sent via SPdif to your home theater receiver as the bandwidth is way too large.
2) BD also uses AC3 or stereo PCM. Sony does not support AC3! And, if you have made a 5.1 soundtrack you are forced to burn a multi-channel LPCM track. Unfortunately, this track cannot be sent via SPdif to your home theater receiver as the bandwidth is way too large.
So you can make SD DVD with AC3, but not HD DVDs. Which makes the claims of AC3 support very misleading if you work in HD.
3) We all know that AVCHD is DVD-+R and not BD. But, the AVCHD settings are under BD, not DVD. So the co-inventor of AVCHD has an NLE that has no direct burn-to-AVCHD function! And, the main inventor of BD -- won't burn a BD with an AC3 track.
4) We also know BD supports up to 40Mbps yet Sony limits AVC to 20Mbps and MPEG-2 to 25Mbps. Why is Sony limiting our quality?
The solution -- which I posted on the Sony site -- is to buy Ulead MovieFactory which has clear choices for AVCHD and BD and HD DVD. Now you can do anything you want. And, in the past, I've found if you import a "correct" file -- it does not recompress. Although, you might want to export uncompressed from Vegas and let MF do the encoding since you have more control.
Kaushik Parmar September 5th, 2008, 12:18 AM Kaushik,
I really hope they fix the remaining bugs since most of PD7 is really very well done, and their slideshow features are excellent as your samples demonstrate.
If you have a projector connected directly to a computer and can display computer video without using mpeg / h.264 encoding, I can also recomend another very low cost slideshow program developed in Russia which makes outstanding slideshows, is very low cost, and makes either high def AVI / mpeg files, and also executable .exe files which display full photo resolution content without any mpeg / h.264 degredation. Of the dozen or more slideshow programs I have been experimenting with over the last few years, it has become one of my favorites. It is called MySlideShowGold from Anix Software. I have worked with the developer, Andrew Anoshkin, on a couple beta releases to help him debug it. If you like slideshows, you should check out the trial version. See:
MySlideShow - software for creating slide shows, photo albums, screen savers, presentations, video files, VideoCD and DVD (http://www.anixsoft.com/myslideshow.html)
Best,
Larry
Larry,
I have checked "MySlideShow" software, and I would like to tell you this is nowhere near to PowerDirector 7, it is normal slideshow creator. I must say PowerDirector rules in slideshow part! As you said you liked my two clips, it came out excellent!
If you have not explore PD7' slideshow features I would recommend you to see them!
Kaushik
Steve Mullen September 5th, 2008, 01:56 AM Looks like Sony is going to keep HDV alive in the Prosumer space.
The new $4000 Sony HDR-FX1000 HDV camcorder features 3 x 1/3-inch CMOS sensors. The lens is non-removable. The lens has three control rings: focus, zoom, and iris. There are also three built-in ND filters (1/4, 1/16, and 1/64). The camcorder includes a 3.2-inch LCD with a resolution of 921,000 pixels.
Wonder if they will ALSO release a non-tape $4000 camcorder using AVCHD.
Kaushik Parmar September 5th, 2008, 05:59 AM Looks like Sony is going to keep HDV alive in the Prosumer space.
The new $4000 Sony HDR-FX1000 HDV camcorder features 3 x 1/3-inch CMOS sensors. The lens is non-removable. The lens has three control rings: focus, zoom, and iris. There are also three built-in ND filters (1/4, 1/16, and 1/64). The camcorder includes a 3.2-inch LCD with a resolution of 921,000 pixels.
Wonder if they will ALSO release a non-tape $4000 camcorder using AVCHD.
Steve,
Have you gone through my slideshows clips? see: http://www.vimeo.com/1639491
http://www.vimeo.com/1636736
Kaushik
Larry Horwitz September 5th, 2008, 06:06 AM Larry,
I have checked "MySlideShow" software, and I would like to tell you this is nowhere near to PowerDirector 7, it is normal slideshow creator. I must say PowerDirector rules in slideshow part! As you said you liked my two clips, it came out excellent!
If you have not explore PD7' slideshow features I would recommend you to see them!
Kaushik
It is true Kaushik that MySlideShow Gold does not create anywhere near the range of special effects of Power Director 7, and is not a good alternative in this comparison. However, it generates direct output to projectors or monitors without requiring any encoding, and our photography club chose it to use for displaying digital photos on our club projection system since it preserves as much detail as possible from 4-12 megapixel images when shown on our projection system at 1920 by 1080 HD resolution. With PD7 and other video editing programs which support slideshows, the output slideshow is a DVD, HD DVD, AVCHD, or BluRay disk encoded as a video / movie with the added encoding artifacts. I suggested it mostly for this reason. It also has the nice ability to take a set of photos and build a self-contained executatble program which can be emailed or delivered on a CD to someone who does not have any hi def equipment but who does have a computer and monitor. It will play at the computer's maximum screen resolution, again with noform of encoding / compression other than the original JPEG, preventing the effects of applying mpeg2 or mpeg4 encoding on top of JPEG. For our photography club members, this is the way people bring their photo results into the photo class room as well. I thought you might find it interesting. Also, at $29 it is less than half the price of ProShow Gold from Photodex, a program which it closely resembles which sells for $69 and many photographers also like to use for slideshows.
Thanks for checking it out.
Larry
Kaushik Parmar September 5th, 2008, 06:18 AM It is true Kaushik that MySlideShow Gold does not create anywhere near the range of special effects of Power Director 7, and is not a good alternative in this comparison. However, it generates direct output to projectors or monitors without requiring any encoding, and our photography club chose it to use for displaying digital photos on our club projection system since it preserves as much detail as possible from 4-12 megapixel images when shown on our projection system at 1920 by 1080 HD resolution. With PD7 and other video editing programs which support slideshows, the output slideshow is a DVD, HD DVD, AVCHD, or BluRay disk encoded as a video / movie with the added encoding artifacts. I suggested it mostly for this reason. It also has the nice ability to take a set of photos and build a self-contained executatble program which can be emailed or delivered on a CD to someone who does not have any hi def equipment but who does have a computer and monitor. It will play at the computer's maximum screen resolution, again with noform of encoding / compression other than the original JPEG, preventing the effects of applying mpeg2 or mpeg4 encoding on top of JPEG. For our photography club members, this is the way people bring their photo results into the photo class room as well. I thought you might find it interesting. Also, at $29 it is less than half the price of ProShow Gold from Photodex, a program which it closely resembles which sells for $69 and many photographers also like to use for slideshows.
Thanks for checking it out.
Larry
Larry,
PD7 is superior in all, I made 720p MPEG2 and I am very happy with the output! PD7 is a indeed revolution in terms of slideshow, if you noticed my both slides, you must have felt grip, means you would love to see it again & again! It is very much soothing to our eyes. And everybody loves to see their pictures in motion with some innovative effect and with background some music!
Full marks to CyberLink team for this innovative slideshow features!
Kaushik
Larry Horwitz September 5th, 2008, 10:04 AM Hi Larry
There should be three icons on the desktop for the converter. AVCHD2HQ, AVCHDPRV, and HQ codec setup. Under the setup its possible to set for standard or fine conversion and alter the parameters though standard is the one I use. One can also set whether the conversion is to ITU601 or from RGB ( 0-255 to IRE 0 to 100). If you drag a file over the preview icon it will play in a preview window, Opening the AVCHD2HQ will allow you to set whether the sound conversion is to 2 channel or 5.1. When you make this selection another box will open allowing you to choose the directory for the converted file. I make sure the directory for the converted file is on another hard drive from the source file, much faster. Once this is set dragging a file over the ICON will use these set parameters until you change them. The problem with defaults for Sony and Edius etc is that they are all on the boot drive and so this poor drive has to keep swapping back and for as well as manage all the access that Windows wants!!!! Don't use the boot drive for any of the video source or destination. For me a PC needs 4 drives for nice clean video performance. boot, temp and preview, and two for storage.
Ron
Thanks Ron. By the time I read this post I had deleted the trial of Edius fro my system. The user interface is extremely well done, but my prior complaints still stand.
For whatever it is worth, I took mixed HD content from 3 of my HD cameras, HDV from an HV-20, AVCHD from an HF100, and MJPEG from my tiny Canon TX-1 and mixed all three on the same timeline of Nero Vision. Despite the fact that all 3 are of different resolutions (1920, 1440, 1280 by 720 for the MJPEG) they were beautifully preserved in the final AVCHD disk. Yes, they did require transcoding, but the fact that this little gem did the job at all blew me away!
Larry
Larry Horwitz September 5th, 2008, 10:08 AM Last night I got Vegas 9 Plat up and running. Very nice for $85.
BUT
Sony seems to have designed its export options to force one to buy DVD ARCH 5.
1) AVCHD uses AC3 or stereo PCM. Sony does not support AC3! And, if you have made a 5.1 soundtrack -- a really neat feature of Vegas -- you are forced to burn a multi-channel LPCM track. Unfortunately, this track cannot be sent via SPdif to your home theater receiver as the bandwidth is way too large.
2) BD also uses AC3 or stereo PCM. Sony does not support AC3! And, if you have made a 5.1 soundtrack you are forced to burn a multi-channel LPCM track. Unfortunately, this track cannot be sent via SPdif to your home theater receiver as the bandwidth is way too large.
So you can make SD DVD with AC3, but not HD DVDs. Which makes the claims of AC3 support very misleading if you work in HD.
3) We all know that AVCHD is DVD-+R and not BD. But, the AVCHD settings are under BD, not DVD. So the co-inventor of AVCHD has an NLE that has no direct burn-to-AVCHD function! And, the main inventor of BD -- won't burn a BD with an AC3 track.
4) We also know BD supports up to 40Mbps yet Sony limits AVC to 20Mbps and MPEG-2 to 25Mbps. Why is Sony limiting our quality?
The solution -- which I posted on the Sony site -- is to buy Ulead MovieFactory which has clear choices for AVCHD and BD and HD DVD. Now you can do anything you want. And, in the past, I've found if you import a "correct" file -- it does not recompress. Although, you might want to export uncompressed from Vegas and let MF do the encoding since you have more control.
This does not portend good things for AVCHD users in Vegas 9 Pro, whenever it will be released. Sony has ALWAYS been slow to provide the tools needed, and left me and my new FX-1 with no Sony software tools literally for years after I bought it a few weeks after it was introduced in 2003. It is incredible how much hubris they demonstrate...
In fact, the very absence of pro tols is what started me on the path of Ulead, Cyberlink, etc., all of whom offered reasonable HDV solutions as well as AVCHD solutions long before Sony or the other "pro" programs.
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