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Dvd architect m2ts recompress
Dvd architect m2ts recompress













  1. DVD ARCHITECT M2TS RECOMPRESS SOFTWARE
  2. DVD ARCHITECT M2TS RECOMPRESS TV

People who simply display photos on hard drive via screen don't understand that this is not the same thing as creating a slide show that is exported to a video file. The higher versions of Vegas or Premier ought to provide a means to crop or animate large files with limited IQ loss or artifacts, but the only way to find out is test. To zoom or crop a large file, it is better to do that in a photo editor, then import the cropped file into the video editor. I get good results with a 2008 version of Pinnacle Studio, but it downsizes large files, so I shoot many stills at 1920x1080 resolution. Or the "Ken Burns" effect may be awkward: moiré, jerkiness, blur. Larger files may require downsampling, hence the loss of IQ or perhaps other distortions. Therefore, it may import still photos with that resolution excellently.

DVD ARCHITECT M2TS RECOMPRESS SOFTWARE

Software that oriented to disc-burning is often geared to video, whose resolution maxes at 1920x1080. It just was kind of neat seeing the Ken Burns effect in different ways in these photos, but at this point not really worth the reduced quality and the time and expense. And also play to any music I want from my stereo system. That way I get super sharp pictures and with no flicker and I can change transitions and do random play.

dvd architect m2ts recompress

DVD ARCHITECT M2TS RECOMPRESS TV

I'm afraid I'm dealing with problems built into efforts to watch these things on big screen TV with software-produced motion effects. Unfortunately, it also softens the image too much for me. That does get rid of much of the problem. The ProShow, I discovered, has an "anti-flicker" option for when using 1080i (I'd been using 1080p). I've been looking into this this afternoon and trying more things, and I think I'm better off staying away from slideshow programs and just using the usb input on my blu-ray player and playing slideshows that way - direct from the player usb, to the TV. So I'm hoping for responses from people who get the whole picture and problems and have a program they can personally rave about. Have you tried it? Do you understand that my concern is about quality pictures, and can you personally say that the PQ, even with motion effects, is excellent? I just don't want to keep wasting time by loading new software, learning it, burning a disc, and being disappointed. And if you try it and don't like it, well, sorry about your luck, but as I said above there's more than just the software program that could be going on here. If I rave about the software I use on a forum like this I"ll have a bunch of idiots yelling "Fanboy!", so the only advice I will give is that it works for me, and might be worth a try for you. It's not about whether I "understand" your problem, as much as the fact that I'm never coming your house to see your problem for myself.

dvd architect m2ts recompress

All any of us on this forum can do is say what worked for our particular situation. I'm afraid you may not have much of a choice but to try things until you find one you like. You seem pretty discerning about the slideshow quality.

dvd architect m2ts recompress

You might be able to play with the tv settings a bit, but it's not a given that you'll ever be able to get your tv to render things as well as a decent monitor. If you're just letting the disk burning software compress the images for you, you might not be getting the best quality from that, and you might be better off using something like Lightroom and exporting specifically to a 1080 pixel high image.Īlso, bear in mind that while an HDTV might have the same 1920x1080 resolution as the computer monitor you're using, a large tv has a much larger pixel pitch so that might effect how you percieve it, and the color gammut from your tv might be considerably worse as well, so things might come off a bit flat. You may also be chasing the wrong culprit here though. The pictures look good, given that they are limited to 1080 pixels in height and are shown on a tv. Yes, I own it and have made Blu-Ray format disks with a slide show.















Dvd architect m2ts recompress