Audio encoding preferences

I see that Encore gives me the opportunity to change my project preferences for audio encoding to one of 4 settings, starting with 9 mbps as the highest, and defaults to 8 mbps. Is it best to set it to 9 for quality unless space is an issue? Or is there another reason for the different settings that I don't understand?

>peak bitrates of 8375 and 8272 in 2 key points
A BURNED disc is not going to play as well as a PRESSED disc... which is part of the reason the movie studios are able to produce discs that play "everywhere"
To
Burn Error Proof DVDs (Well, close to error proof!)
Use the SLOWEST possible burn option your burner will allow in Encore, since it is much better to take a bit more time burning the disc than it is to burn "fast" and have a disc that won't play
Set the VIDEO portion of the transcoding options to a Maximum of 7,000 so your burned disc will have a better chance at playing in desktop players (which support burned discs, if at all, only as an "after thought" of the DVD specification)
Use AC3 or PCM audio transcode settings for best player compatibility (some discussion of MPEG audio not being supported by all players)
Buy and use Taiyo Yuden (or Verbatim?) brand blank discs
Read this
ENTIRE message http://www.adobeforums.com/cgi-bin/webx?128@@.3bc2ca16
And this one
Tips for Authoring and Playing a DVD
Discussion of
Peak Bitrate

Similar Messages

  • Solution to audio encoding problem achieved

    I was using clips from my Sanyo Xacti Camcorder, imported into iMovie as mpeg 4 files and unable to finish the project in iDVD as the error would come in the audio encoding stage.A quick test is to export the iMovie files through Quicktime and it would stop cold, saying something is wrong with the file.
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    The finished product is a Quicktime movie that has both video and audio files that iDVD can handle and use.And it saves time in audio conversion by doing it in GarageBand first.

    I was unable to export the imovie to quicktime, as the error message came within seconds , saying about something wrong with the file. The only way I could export the file to quicktime format is through GarageBand.
    GarageBand is the application to add another sound track , and it preserves the whole imovie and could be exported directly to iDVD, instead of exporting to
    Quicktime format first. The only reason I did this "extra" step was because I already knew if the Quicktime movie would not fail in iDVD, and it is quicker to check it this way then to wait 10 hours for iDVD time.
    It was already recognized that iMovie does not do audio conversion, and when the audio files are not native to iDVD(i.e. 48 Hz sampling), the iDVD would crash.
    See
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=800972&tstart=30

  • Audio Encoding & Ken Burns Problems Persist - More Help Please.

    My previous thread (10/27): Encoding Audio in iDVD for 41 hours. Is there any hope?
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    Wow, this sounds like a long time. Is this DV? Or
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    The extension is .dv What is H.264
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    use Export> Quicktime> Full Quality DV.
    I did.
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    I heard that, but it took me 2 weeks to make my movie and at present I can't bear the thought of redoing all my KB photos.
    I also tried exporting iMovie to my JVC GR-DVP3
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    Check the iMovie forum for this one, but it sure
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  • IDVD audio encoding error

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    Is there any audio associated with the video?
    iDVD 5: Audio encoding error when burning a DVD
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=301876
    iDVD: Troubleshooting issues with burning discs
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=302925
    Sue

  • Audio encoding hang work around

    After scouring this discussion and the internet, it seems the following is true:
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    As to #2, by looking at the package contents (Command I) you can see the progress of the audio encoding even when you think it is hung and even if you get a not responding message. To do this open your local disk, go to documents which is where iDVD puts them, and look for the title of your project, highlight it and hit Command I. Note the bytes, close the info dialog, and then reopen again. You may need to do this a few times depending on RAM, clock speed, etc., but you should see a change in bytes after awhile. If so, there is progress being made, as painstakingly slow as it may be. (A 1h53m movie took about 40 hours on my G5 with 1.5MB RAM! Not acceptable!)
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    The other work around is sharing to Quicktime and then reimporing to iMovie as a new project, and do the same as above. Following the latter, it took me 40 hours plus before took about 5 hours.
    I hope this saves you all some time.
    iMac 20" G5 iSight   Mac OS X (10.4.7)   1.5GB RAM, Ext HD 250GB

    I think I may have found a solution to my problem. It seems
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    program. If I try a lower resolution setting it works fine. If I
    set the priority of the program high I can use higher
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  • Audio encoding troubles

    After some time off, I'm again burning old family vhs and Hi8 tapes to dvd but this time w/our new intel core duo. I've tried varying the themes in iDVD but with some of them I get the spinning beach ball after the video encoding--at the beginning of the audio encoding. It simpy hangs up after about 30 seconds and the dreaded beach ball appears. I've tried to re-burn after splitting the clips so that none are longer than 15 minutes--still no go. I never add music so the only audio is from the original tapes or the default music with associated with the theme. This was never a problem with the dvds I creaed on our G4 using some of the older iDVD themes. Any ideas? thanks

    This was never a problem with the dvds I creaed on
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    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=302988
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  • Audition CS6 Mac Won't Play Audio Interface Preference Issue

    Hi Im having some problems with Audition CS6 mac. I have the full master collection and only encounter this issue with Audition.
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    I just found that removing MachineSpecificSettings.xml in the user/preferences/adobe/audition/5.0/  folder will get it to play again under the internal audio settings. And when I look at channel mapping it shows the internal audio.

  • Has Apple fixed the audio encoding problem?

    As many other people seems to have experienced before me, iDVD6 stops working when encoding audio. Everything works before that step but when it reaches the "Audio Encoding" sequence iDVD stops working. Did Apple fix the problem? What else can we do?
    Thanks for any reply.
    Frank
    iMac G5   Mac OS X (10.4.5)   PowerMac G4

    I followed your advice and restarted at 6:00 pm last night - this morning it was still going on - over 13 hours! The funny thing this time is that I got the 'rainbow ball' encoding audio at the beginning of the 3rd step, 'Processing movie' after only 1-1/2 hour. The last time I burned the same project, I got the 'rainbow ball' encoding audio message at the end of the 3rd step - in other words, it had processed the entire movie (which took 6 hours) and then began the encoding audio phase. I'm letting it run while I'm at work, but do you think there might be something else going on?
    Here are some facts which apply to both times that I have tried burning the DVD project:
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    2. and the iDVD project is on the internal hard drive with about 50 Gb of available space
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    Which drive is doing all the encoding and needing the most space - the internal or the external? I was assuming it was the internal drive. Should I move the iMovie project back to my internal drive and start over?
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  • Audio Encoding problem at burn step...

    working at high school...fair newbies here, have had about a half-dozen successful movies completed so far..
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    Larry

    Hi Larry!
    This question is one of our 'most popular'!
    It is probably not 'hanging'. Disregard any messages that iDVD is not responding. It is. Ignore the spinning beachball of death. Do not force quit.
    Encoding audio is the slowest part of rendering, and can take many hours. Great patience, even an intermittent alternative hobby, is called for.
    Make sure no other application is running, make sure you have not set the hard disk to go to sleep and that the screen saver will not come on. Leave it overnight, or have a 36 hole game of golf.
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  • Audio encoding problem

    Hello,
    I've successfully burned a half dozen iMovie projects with no problems but this time I am having a new problem.
    Each time I attempt to burn an iMovie project to iDVD it progresses fine through the various stages, but when it gets near the end to the "Audio Encoding" stage it just sits there and never seems to finish.
    I've been seraching through earlier postings but haven't found this specific issue.
    Any ideas?
    Much obliged.

    I am also having this problem. iDVD gets to the end of the audio encoding and stops responding. If I leave it for a few hours it does finally finish but there is an error "timed-out" message on the screen. Very annoying. I've read elsewere that the problem may be caused by the latest QuickTime update (7.1.0) which I did install this week. Several threads suggest downgrading QT. I tried it via the suggested links, it mildly crashed the OS. I was able to recover after reinstalling the lastes QT. Coincidentally, I've since read the downgrade does not work with Intel iMacs. Come on Apple, let's get this FIXED.
    Which version of QT are you running?

  • FMLE 3 - Doesn't get past "Audio Encoding"

    Hello,
    After pressing the "Start" button in FMLE 3 it does what it does etc then as soon as it gets to "Audio Encoding Started" it just stops, the program still runs fine but I can't stream it just pauses at that point and doesn't continue.
    Any help is appreciated.

    It seems that Video device you are using is not giving any Video packets because of which FMLE is not able to start encoding. FMLE will start encoding only when it recieve both Audio and Video packets. Can you please check that your Video device is working fine or not. If you have another Video device then try starting encoding with it or uncheck Video and then try starting encoding. It will start your only Audio encoding.

  • Audio Encoding improvement

    Background - many of us have experienced long delays while iDVD conducts audio encoding. For those who are unfamiliar with this issue, conduct a iDVD forum search for "audio encoding" for the details.
    Last week, I upgraded to OX 10.4.9, Quicktime 7.1.5., and iTunes 7.1.1.
    Today, I finished creating a 29 minute movie with 29 minutes of added audio and lots of transitions. I then exported to iDVD. I created a DVD image file. It took 20 minutes. It appears that the "audio encoding" delay has been reduced. Has anyone else upgrade and experienced improvement in the audio encoding?

    Thanks for sharing that Milton. I have also upgraded as you have, and am in the middle of a big editing job on the latest family movie (from 2001 - I'm getting nearer, I started with 1984!) but have not so far had an opportunity of completing a project to test that theory. I am looking forward to doing so - in fact I may even add more extra music just to see what happens, I can always remove it and start again!
    We cannot discuss rumours here, but I have read reports that this (audio) issue will be resolved in iMovie 7. Perhaps they were beta testing that bug fix in 10.4.9 or the QT update, but in neither case was there any official mention that anything whatever was upgraded in iLife 6.
    I believe every word you say, but it would be great to have corroboration from other users!

  • Audio Encoding and iTunes update

    iTunes has just released an update. Maybe it will fix the audio encoding problem???

    Hi Milton
    If you create an iMovie, e.g., 1 hour movie, and insert audio, such as music from iTunes, then take the project into iDVD, and then begin the "burn" process, it will take many hours to encode the audio
    Not on every machine, not for everybody. This afternoon I finished 'assembling' a 102 minute iMovie project which included 3 music tracks imported in AIFF format via iTunes, and 13 chapters. I imported this into iDVD, picked a theme, and burnt it to disk image.
    I burnt the disk image at 2x to DVD using Toast. The entire process (from saving the iMovie project to ejecting the DVD) took a little under four and a half hours.
    Search the iDVD forum, you'll find lots of discussion on this audio encoding problem.
    I don't need to search, I read all the threads, and I am mystified, and very sympathetic, to those people who have a really bad experience, like the guy who took 4 days to complete a project with music.
    But I don't think we should generalise about how long these things take. We all have our own modus operandi. What works for you, works for you. What works for me works for me.
    We should all try to find out what works for the others - or why it doesn't.

  • Audio Encoding Beachball

    Hello
    I have read the posts about the lenght of the Audio Encoding process, and most suggest to be patient... However, is there a way to tell if the beachball means that it is really encoding and one must wait, or if the program has frozen.
    The reason I ask is because I left it overnight and found it in the same place. When calling the force quit menu, iDVD appeared as 'not responding'. I had to force quit it.
    This has happened twice already, but I'm not sure if iDVD a ctually stops responding by me calling up the force quit menu or not.
    In other words.... how can I tell if the beach ball means 'still working on it' and therefore must leave it alone or if it means 'I´m stuck' and therefore one must force quit ans start again
    Thanks
    K

    Can't find a way to tell....
    There is no way to tell. My longest wait has been 30 minutes. Once it gets through the apparent "frozen stage" there is a progress bar that starts and runs a couple of minutes. But I haven't had any hours-long experiences like some people.
    Some times, creating a new "stream" of data out of iMovie solves the problem.
    You can Share your iMovie project back to a camcorder set to record 16-bit audio. Or you can Share to QuickTime Full Quality and use that file in a new iDVD project.
    Read this:
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=302988

  • Audio Encoding Hang

    I'm having troubles getting passed the "audio encoding
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    Here is what the log says before it either crashes or does
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    Wed Mar 18 2009 23:47:28 : Selected video input device:
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    Wed Mar 18 2009 23:47:28 : Selected audio input device:
    Logitech Mic (Pro 9000)
    Wed Mar 18 2009 23:47:29 : The selected audio device
    "Logitech Mic (Pro 9000)" doesn't allow setting volume intensity.
    Disabling the volume slider control.
    Wed Mar 18 2009 23:47:34 : Primary - Connected
    Wed Mar 18 2009 23:47:35 : Primary -
    Stream[live_2005305_jKc5JtDY] Status: Success
    Wed Mar 18 2009 23:47:35 : Primary -
    Stream[live_2005305_jKc5JtDY] Status: NetStream.Publish.Start
    Wed Mar 18 2009 23:47:35 : Session Started
    Wed Mar 18 2009 23:47:36 : Session Started
    Wed Mar 18 2009 23:47:36 : Audio Encoding Started
    Wed Mar 18 2009 23:47:36 : Audio Encoding Stopped
    Wed Mar 18 2009 23:47:36 : Session Stopped
    Wed Mar 18 2009 23:47:37 : Session Started
    Wed Mar 18 2009 23:47:38 : Session Started
    Wed Mar 18 2009 23:47:38 : Audio Encoding Started
    I can't understand why it works sometimes and other times it
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    I think I may have found a solution to my problem. It seems
    to be related to how much resources(RAM) I have available to the
    program. If I try a lower resolution setting it works fine. If I
    set the priority of the program high I can use higher
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