Russell Heaton
November 21st, 2010, 10:05 PM
G'day all,
Four years ago I paid big bucks for a Vaio laptop with a blu-ray burner. Well, one thing and another led to that laptop being rarely used until just recently, when I decided that it was time to deliver a project in blu-ray format.
The project was shot in 1440 x 1080 50i and thinking that I could reduce rendering and recompression times I decided to output my blu-ray disk in the same resolution. All good so far.
I use Sony DVDA and have the latest version, V5.2. I also use Sony Vegas Pro (V10) and when it came time to render the final project I chose an MPEG2/AC3 combination that was "legal" when choosing the "Blu-ray 1440 x 1080 50i" template from the list of many that I could output. All good so far.
Once the video and audio streams were rendered I moved them into a DVDA project, set up the menus etc and then prepared for burning to disk. The dialog box that normally tells me that "this and that" need to be "recompressed" didn't have anything to say (because of the wise decisions I'd made back in Vegas Pro). All good so far.
The Blu-Ray prep went well, the burning process went well. Finished product in my hand. Yay! All good so far.
Now, the problem I have is that I don't actually have a blu-ray player. The only one I've got is the laptop software player (Intervideo WinDVD BD), so I put the newly created disk back in the tray and close it and wait....... Hmmm Intervideo didn't start by itself. OK, point Intervideo at the disk....still nothing. Hmmm, All not so good now.
OK, the laptop is 4 years old and hasn't had a software or firmware update in that time. 4 hours, 5 optical drive firmware updates and three software ugrades/updates later I'm thinking that I should be able to play the Blu-ray disk now. Nope. All that happens is that the disk whirs and does some seeking and then the word "Stop" comes up on the player screen. Hmmm things getting worse now.
OK, I figure that maybe I made a wrong turn when making the disk in the first place. I don't have a single commercial Blu-ray title that I can try and play, just to see whether it is the player or my disk building methods, so I do some research on the 'net. Wikipedia comes to the rescue. I found a page that lists all of the legal (meets the standards) formats and resolutions for Blu-ray.
It tells me that for 1440 x 1080 50i, I can only render the video stream as an AVC stream. So, 3.5 hours later, I've rendered a new stream, plonked it into my project in place of the previous mpeg stream and burnt new disk. All good so far....
OK, put the disk in the player and yoohoo! the Intervideo player opens by itself.....and then comes up with the word "STOP" on the screen again. Nothing else happens or can be made to happen. Now I'm stuffed. My disk may work in a hardware Blu-ray player, but I don't have one and I don't know anyone whom does have one. I don't have a commercial blu-ray disk to try and live 45 Kilometres from any place where I can get hold of one.
I'm starting to hate Blu-ray......
Cheers
Russ
Four years ago I paid big bucks for a Vaio laptop with a blu-ray burner. Well, one thing and another led to that laptop being rarely used until just recently, when I decided that it was time to deliver a project in blu-ray format.
The project was shot in 1440 x 1080 50i and thinking that I could reduce rendering and recompression times I decided to output my blu-ray disk in the same resolution. All good so far.
I use Sony DVDA and have the latest version, V5.2. I also use Sony Vegas Pro (V10) and when it came time to render the final project I chose an MPEG2/AC3 combination that was "legal" when choosing the "Blu-ray 1440 x 1080 50i" template from the list of many that I could output. All good so far.
Once the video and audio streams were rendered I moved them into a DVDA project, set up the menus etc and then prepared for burning to disk. The dialog box that normally tells me that "this and that" need to be "recompressed" didn't have anything to say (because of the wise decisions I'd made back in Vegas Pro). All good so far.
The Blu-Ray prep went well, the burning process went well. Finished product in my hand. Yay! All good so far.
Now, the problem I have is that I don't actually have a blu-ray player. The only one I've got is the laptop software player (Intervideo WinDVD BD), so I put the newly created disk back in the tray and close it and wait....... Hmmm Intervideo didn't start by itself. OK, point Intervideo at the disk....still nothing. Hmmm, All not so good now.
OK, the laptop is 4 years old and hasn't had a software or firmware update in that time. 4 hours, 5 optical drive firmware updates and three software ugrades/updates later I'm thinking that I should be able to play the Blu-ray disk now. Nope. All that happens is that the disk whirs and does some seeking and then the word "Stop" comes up on the player screen. Hmmm things getting worse now.
OK, I figure that maybe I made a wrong turn when making the disk in the first place. I don't have a single commercial Blu-ray title that I can try and play, just to see whether it is the player or my disk building methods, so I do some research on the 'net. Wikipedia comes to the rescue. I found a page that lists all of the legal (meets the standards) formats and resolutions for Blu-ray.
It tells me that for 1440 x 1080 50i, I can only render the video stream as an AVC stream. So, 3.5 hours later, I've rendered a new stream, plonked it into my project in place of the previous mpeg stream and burnt new disk. All good so far....
OK, put the disk in the player and yoohoo! the Intervideo player opens by itself.....and then comes up with the word "STOP" on the screen again. Nothing else happens or can be made to happen. Now I'm stuffed. My disk may work in a hardware Blu-ray player, but I don't have one and I don't know anyone whom does have one. I don't have a commercial blu-ray disk to try and live 45 Kilometres from any place where I can get hold of one.
I'm starting to hate Blu-ray......
Cheers
Russ