Converting to Quicktime Full Quality DV ...Why so long?

In an effort to avoid the Audio Encoding problem, I've been trying to take everyone's advice by converting the iMovie to a full quality DV but on my G4, for a 90 minute project it was compressing for about 5 hours and even then it was still displaying that there was 742 minutes to go and still that figure was rising. If anyone out there has got a minute to explain why this is so I'd be very appreciative.
Just don't get it? I highlighted 17 minutes of the project out of curiousity and shared that to Full Quality and that just took about 34 minutes!
Borrowed the work G5 DP 2GHZ and that seems faster at doing the task ( doing it now actually and it's up to 220 minutes and rising and less than a quarter of the way there) but this is still longer than exporting the project to the camera and then re-importing it to a new project. That's a guaranteed 3 hours and then it's less than 7 hours from encoding to burnt disc....no audio encoding problems. iDVD breezes through that task. (By the way, about 2 and a half hours on the G5 (wish I owned one)
Peter L
Dual 450 G4   Mac OS X (10.4.2)  

Thanks so much for responding guys....
Len, yep camera is definitely recording in 16-bit.
John.... nothing HD here, all DV files. Yes plenty of free space on the HFS+ formatted drive.
Yes, there is lots to render in this project but when I singled out say 10 minutes of a segment that's full on slow-motion and sepia (with an mp3 under it too) and then sent that for sharing to full quality DV, it did it in 20 minutes or less.
So in my head I'm thinkin... 20 minutes to do 10 minutes of footage, 180 minutes to do the full 90 minute project.
Actually tried it with the identical project on work's G5 (same machine you have), and it still took about 7 hours overnight. And plenty of free space on its hard drive too.
I've done so many experiments over the last week with different discs, methods of exporting and importing, what gets the stalled Audio Encoding treatment and what doesn't and results on two different computers. I think I should make a separate post and report on my findings ( for what its worth) before I forget it all. Might help someone.
One of my best results was just opening the show package contents of the project, clicking on Shared Movies/iDVD/ and then just dragging the .Mov into a new iMovie project . Once again takes some time on the G4 and less on the G5 but for some reason the quality was slightly better than the results I got from the sharing to Full Quality DV. Noticed it at the beginning with the titles. There was bleeding in the letters on the Full Quality DV but it was nice and tight on the dragging the .Mov method. This is even before it was burnt to DVD.
John I can't believe how fast that G5 DP 2GHZ goes through the video encoding process. It's like almost real time. Do you think that even on the Mac Pro 2GHZ it would be as fast or nearly as? I should think about updating soon.
Thanks again
Peter L from the land downunder ....

Similar Messages

  • Converting imovie to Quicktime Full Quality DV

    I'm trying to convert a movie into a full Quality DV, and I keep getting a message that I need to register my music that I have attached to the movie. When I do that and it evetually converts, I'm not getting the music I added to the movie. I've been able to do this in the past, but I think the updated version of itunes is now not letting me do this. Can someone help me out?

    Have you tried burning a playlist of your music to CD in iTunes, and then importing that CD to use in iMovie? That used to be a way to improve the compatibility of some music tracks.
    John

  • Export a movie,NOT quicktime,FULL quality dv

    hello, i'm trying to export a movie as it is.In full quality,DV extension.I want the best quality possible.The quicktime export ruins the titles.please help
    thanks

    welcome!
    New Discussions ReponsesThe new system for discussions asks that after you mark your question as Answered, you take the time to mark any posts that have aided you with the tag and he post that provided your answer with the tag. This not only gives points to the posters, but points anyone searching for answers to similar problems to the proper posts.
    If we use the forums properly they will work well...
    Shane

  • Convert Colors spoil image quality! Why?

    Hello!
    In previous post i mentioned loss of image's quality. Now i tested it again and made example. Don't see any option for avoiding it. Maybe (and probably that's so) i just can't find some important preference. I change in preferences in Categories Convert form/to PDF jpg and tiff option to maximum but it didn't do any good.
    Before and after (zoom 200%):
    Any ideas?
    P.S. Acrobat Pro X.
    Thanks.

    Okay do you have an original of the design.
    try saving in 300 or 600 DPI  create the pdf.
    the try adding the Graphic
    Click on Tools menu Content editing
    next click on add image
    locate the image.
    Now place the image approximately where it should be.
    then choose the image and place in desired area.
    Save
    see if image looks better.

  • Error Sharing "Full Quality"

    Hi All,
    I have just completed an iMovie 5.02 movie and want to export it into Quicktime . It's an MPEG-4 format and the iMovie Project file is about 1.4GB. I choose Share > Quicktime > Full Quality, select a file name and hit OK. It runs for about 60-75mins, then just stops - no error message. It creates an .mp4 file (about 145MB) - when I try to open it with Quicktime, I get an error ("-50"?!). I've done this twice now, with no luck. Any ideas?
    Thanks very much
    Steve

    Hi SR and Karsten:
    Could it be this simple?
    Mac OS X: "Error in user parameter list (-50)" With MS DOS-Formatted Volume
    http://searchdocs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=25532&coll=cp
    :)Sue
    karsten...they call me the librarian-remember

  • Full Quality Share?

    I'm moving from an older version of iMovie into 7 ('08) and am having trouble determining what export settings to use.
    In the older versions of iMovie I used Share -> Full Quality
    The video will be imported into Avid for editing so I need as close to source as possible.
    I've tried several settings so far in '08 and cannot get the quality where it needs to be.
    I guess I'm looking for the '08 equivalent of 'Full Quality' when sharing a movie. .dv or .mov would either be fine formats.
    Thanks in advance for any suggestions or guidance you may be able to provide.
    Message was edited by: rustybucket145

    Well, after a little more digging and searching it looks like a full quality share is no longer possible in iMovie '08. Bummer.
    Anybody know if this is available in iMovie '09?

  • Overlap transitions choppy after exporting 'Full Quality' QuickTime

    I have a movie created with images and music, no video. I used the overlap transition between each image. All images have a slight Ken Burns effect. Then I exported to Full Quality Quicktime to bring into iDVD. I originally tried to export right to iDVD and the resolution was horrible but the transition were fine. Now I have great resolution but the transition is choppy. It's almost like the frames per second dropped during the transition. Don't know what to do to fix it.

    I have solved ALL my issues!! At least with this project. I had 3 issues with this project: low res on final output, flickering in the images while using Ken Burns effect and not so smooth transition issues.
    I changed my video format to HDV 1080i. I was able to use my lower res untouched images (before I put a .6 Gaussian blur effect on the images to reduce the amount of flickering and saved them as high res TIFFs). I did have to change to widescreen format, but I think my client will see that as a cool factor. I'm so happy I could cry!!! It took me a week to get it figured out, but I learned A LOT about iMovie during that time. Now I have a bunch of project ideas flying through my head. I'm going to enjoy my happy moment for a little while. I still do not know why iMovie was doing the weird transition thing in the iSight format. I think I'll stick with the HDV.
    Thanks for the help!
    Serena

  • Converting Full Quality HD files to Large-possible? desirable?

    Last year I bought a camera that shoots AVCHD files and have been importing them into iMovie using the Full Quality setting. My HD is now maxed out and I'm realizing that I can't afford to keep such big files stored. What I'd like to know is (a) is it possible to convert all my files to the Large size? and (b) would I regret doing so?
    Thanks in advance!

    It all depends.
    If you want to keep all the raw footage then you will need to move it to an external HD, since all iMovie does is create a file, "Project" that tells exactly where to go to get everything and plays them, video clip, music, titles etc. together. iMovie cannot ever play that movie if you get rid of any part of it.
    you have several options. IF you want to keep the ability to always edit your movies then you must keep everything in those movies. On the other hand if you are done with the non-used raw footage and only want a high Quick Time movie, Go to the "Share" file and "export to QuickTime", pick the "HD" option and iMovie will import it into a QT movie that looks as good as the iMovie original, and never needs the individual parts to play again.
    That movie will reside in the iMovie project file for that iMovie (Users -> MOvies ->iMovie Projects. You have to Click on that file with the control key pressed to "see package contents" and then if you want you can move the .mov file somewhere else.
    Then you could trash the video that is taking up all the room. The thing is you never really know if you want to edit that film again. If you feel comfortable trashing the clips you don't want but still want to keep the clips you have and the ability to edit the movie again, you can do this 2 ways and save LOT of HD space.
    Again, you could have all the data (events) on an external HD, but then that HD has to be attached to see or do anything with a project. I have all my stuff on a laptop and dont like that option.
    So assuming your events are stored on your main HD, to free up space on your main HD (but still able to play complete projects from the main HD) you have 2 options and they do different things.
    If you pick an event (click on it) then go to File Menu -> "Move event to trash" it will give you an option to
    "Delete" which deletes (to trash) the entire event (essentially destroys project), or "Delete Unused" which moves to the trash all the parts of each and every clip (within that Event) that is not in any project.
    The other option is to choose (doesn't matter what you choose first here) File menu -> "Space Saver"
    and choosing that ("Reject and review") will move ANY clip in ANY event that is not used, into the trash, but leaves the clips you are using alone. The difference here is that, say you use 50% of a given clip from an event in a project, "delete unused" deletes the other 50% (while also deleting any clips that you use 0% of in the project), while "Space saver" leaves the 50% of the clip not used alone, leaving any used clip intact no matter how much of that clip is in a project, and only deletes (trash) clips in which there is nothing used for a project
    The advantage of Delete unused is that really trashes everything that you arent using (btw you have go through that process for every event individually) and frees up the most space. The advantage of "Space saver" is that if you decide you want a second or two more from that clip in your project, it is still there. but then it frees up less space.
    It kinda depends on how you film and how much film you use. I film my kid's games and a game (event) may have 45 clips, start and stop camera each is a clip. I may use 10 of those clips for a highlight film. If i used all of the clips, even 1/100th of each clip, then Space saver would not delete anything. but since I use , eg, only 10 of the clips, Space saver really opens up space on my harddrive. I used to use "Delete unused" which opend up even more room, but then if I want to go back and use more of each clip into the project, I cannot because it is gone forever from my HD.
    write back if confused.
    roger

  • Actual Size (Full Quality) photos being e-mailed at reduced sizes! Why?

    Yesterday I e-mailed six photos to a party in Nova Scotia. Because of the large file size of the photos--ranging from 6.7 MB to 9.2 MB--I opted to e-mail each photo individually. In iPhoto I chose the Actual Size (Full Quality) size setting for each photo.
    Imagine my surprise when I discovered that every photo was e-mailed at a reduced size. For example, the indicated attachment size for the 6.7 MB photo was only 4.6 MB, and for the 9.2 MB photo only 6.1 MB. This is the first time I have noticed photos being e-mailed at reduced sizes even when the Actual Size (Full Quality) size setting has been chosen.
    I would appreciate knowing what is going on here and what I need to do to remedy this situation.
    Bob

    Terence,
    The problem remains unresolved. I followed your recommended procedure and got the same bizarre result!
    I selected in iPhoto the same 9.2 MB photo I e-mailed to Nova Scotia yesterday, clicked on the Email icon, and selected Actual Size (Full Quality). The Mail 1 Photo window correctly showed the estimated size as 9.2 MB. I clicked on the Compose Message button which took me to the E-mail message window. I verified that the Image Size indicated at the lower right hand corner of the window was Actual Size. Interestingly enough, the Message Size indicated in the lower left hand corner of the window was 8.2 MB. Somehow my photo size was reduced 1 MB in the process of it being prepared for E-mail delivery! I then e-mailed the photo to myself. When I opened it up it showed 1 Attachment, 6.1 MB. This is the exact same result I got when I originally e-mailed this photo to Nova Scotia.
    My primary concern here is that the quality of these photos is likely being compromised by this size reduction phenomenon which I have not previously noticed. I'm wondering whether this is a problem with iPhoto '09, Version 8.1 (415) to which I just recently upgraded from iPhoto '06. For your information I have also long employed iPhoto Library Manager (Currently version 3.5.5).
    Perhaps you can try this same procedure and see if you get the same goofy result. I'll be eagerly awaiting your reply and advice on how to resolve this issue.
    Bob

  • "full quality" movie is much fuzzier than compressed movie

    Here's a strange one. When I export a clip as full quality and then play it back as a quicktime movie, the resolution is not nearly as sharp as when I export using "expert settings". The "full quality" file is, as I would expect, about 10 times larger than the compressed file, but much fuzzier.
    What's going on here? Any help would be greatly appreciated!

    But a friend suggested that I could do better by not compressing twice
    Exporting as Full Quality DV doesn't involve any conversion, since DV is iMovie's native format.
    But the strange thing is that On2Flix actually does a better job when you feed it a compressed file. I tried giving it a dv file to convert, and the result was poor.
    Contrary to what many users beleive, DV is compressed. DV is 13GB per hour. Uncompressed video is (I think) over 50GB per hour. And that's for standard definition. HD is much larger.
    So I checked their help section, which reads; "While Flix can encode uncompressed video files, it creates better looking SWF video files from video sources with some compression." I'm actually producing flv files, but I assume the principle is the same.
    DV is indeed compressed, so I wonder why it doesn't work.
    I have never heard of On2Flix before, so I have no idea why it doesn't like DV. Sorry.

  • Video freezes when exporting to Full Quality

    [Background: I've been working on a video project in iMovie HD that I'm doing in pieces - exporting each section of the video at full quality when it's done, so that later I can put them all together in a new project.]
    Lately I've been having major problems exporting to full quality Quicktime files. The exported video freezes a few frames in, though the audio continues to play normally. This does not happen if I save it to a smaller quality, say, Web Streaming.
    I'm having trouble seeing a pattern in how/why/when this happens, too. I have successfully exported movies to full quality both before and after movies that export incorrectly. The first project that had this happen, I decided to reassemble bit by bit to find out if something specific was causing the problem. Turns out that Full Quality exporting started having this problem if I had added titles. After jumping through something like 50 hoops - exporting little pieces, reimporting, exporting just the titles, etc., etc - I managed to work around the issue. Bit of a headache but all seemed to be well.
    BUT, the frozen video problem soon happened again. The next time I had this trouble exporting, there were no titles in the project at all, and the problem instead occurred once I added music. So there does not seem to be a pattern within iMovie itself. This makes me think it's either a Quicktime problem or something to do with my computer itself. I have 2GB of memory, 37GB of space left on my hard drive, and I'm running Quicktime 7.4.1 and iMovie HD 6.0.4.
    Please help! I'm on a bit of a deadline, too. This is driving me crazy!

    Thanks Matt. I am in the same boat as many people have obviously been in - trying to burn a DVD to a film fest deadline of tomorrow, and after 4 hours of trying to make a disk image, getting 'error during burn'.
    I have one question.
    a) In imovie, I clicked the 'create iDVD' button to create this project - which has problems burning.
    b) Now if I simply try to drag that .mov file into the iDVD pane as you suggest, is that identical to what I have done in a) - in that we're operating with the same basic animal. Of so
    c) I should try the process of exporting to .dv, reimporting to new imovie, redoing chapter markers and THEN dragging the package .mov to the iDVD pane - hoping that chapter markers are preserved.
    Oh ... someone said one should try to save the .mov as a sel contained file. is that necessary?
    Thank you for sitting in front of you Mac!

  • Export "full-quality" in iMovie '09.

    Using iMovie HD, I used to export my footage as a full-quality QuickTime movie so I could archive it to disk and access it later. However, in iMovie '09, the "full-quality QuickTime" preset seems to have been removed.
    What export settings in iMovie '09 will allow me to achieve the highest possible quality? I'd like to archive my footage to disk so that I'll always have a digital file to work with.
    Thank you.

    Welcome BarrenRegions to the  iMovie boards ..
    no way to answer that question.. you have to compare apples with peaches.. (German proverb):
    iMHD≥6 was a dv-only editor (and AIC, but this is another story...); it handles dv lossless.. frequent contributor lennart once made a test of ex- and reimporting a few dozends time the same clip = no loss of pic quality.
    now iM08/09:
    it handles dv not as dv internally anymore; therefore it accepts lots of other codecs (mp2, avchd, h264...).. so, depending of your source, the export can be lossy.
    we have mile-long threads about that, search for posts from Steve Mullen and Euisung Lee who did research this issue +ad nauseam+
    as far as I followed that discussion: there's a 'trick', to convert - after import into iM08/09 - the imports to AppleIntermediate with tools as QTpro or Mpeg Streamclip. that blows-up size, but forces iM08/09 to keep quality a 100%...
    .. sorry for being less helpful, even as a 'Silverback' on this board, all that is +a bit+ beyond my skills, needs and understanding.. to be honest: I switched awhile ago to FinalCutExpress, and will use iM09 when I'll get a new rec-device.. hopefully this year (Santa! do you listen?!...)

  • Questions about exporting to full quality?

    Hey there -
    I just wanted to make sure that if I want to give my friend back a DV file from the converted tape that I choose Export, then Full Quality? I know that creates one file vs individual clips but her tape was one long one, I did chapter markers for the dvd and make splits but I don't think she wants those (some are arbitrary, e.g. the tape was long than an hour so iMovie HD split it into two clips). So, I just want to be sure that that's the right choice for exporting?
    And, on that, does that remove transitions or keep them?
    Lastly, there is a weird screen in QuickTime in the resulting file. It's a colorblock screen of sorts - a whole punch of pixels (big TV ones, not sure what they are called) in a bunch of colors. It's happening RIGHT at the end of the footage - not thrilled about it but it is the DV file, I guess. Depending on answer to above, I may at least extend the end transition so it doesn't make future editing difficult. Any way to eliminate it from happening?
    Thanks for your help -
    Alexa

    +You should be able to move the cursor frame-by-frame with the arrow keys to get to the precise 'cut' point.+
    I know - it's strange but I lost a few seconds of just black screen at the end - I even went back and checked against the actual movie. At any rate, I'm slicing them off carefully and now am adding just a few seconds of still time at the end so it's not an issue.
    +What exactly is it that your friends want to do with the digitized footage? I recommend that you make them a DVD of the edited movie, and then export the movie back to the camcorder so they also have a digital mini DV tape of it. This way, they can view the DVD to see their movie and show to others, but they also have a backup on tape.+
    Ah, let's see - somehow I've agreed to convert a bag full of VHSC and VHS tapes (and hours and hours of my life for footage that's not even my family!) At any rate, I am giving them the deluxe end product - a customized movie with smoother transitions and chapters, a customized DVD menu with images and chapters (and music, if it fits) and a customized case and printed DVD (Taiyo Yuden printed Watershield DVD). Yes, the works. So, then I told them to buy a external HDD and I would move the resulting DV files to it so they would have them should the ever want to use the footage again (e.g. make an "anniversary" montage that pulls in just clips from their wedding, or a wedding montage for their kids that includes the baby footage that I digitized.) So, they have the VHSC and VHS originals, they'll have the movie on DVD and they were going to have the DV files on a hard drive of the appropriate size. That was my recommendation since the problem was that the tapes sat around in the first place - they aren't going to convert them without help. But, if that's the "best" option for longer-lasting backup, I can offer it to them.
    +If this were for your use, I would recommend that you also create a disk image of the iDVD project as backup. ...Because the disk image file is self-contained, you can safely delete the iMovie and iDVD projects without losing the ability to burn DVDs of the iDVD project that is now saved as the disk image. You use Disk Utility (or Toast if you have it) to burn the actual DVD disk.+
    That is the best advice I could have received! I hadn't really figured out what I was going to do with the actual iMovie and iDVD projects after I was finished. I was reluctant to delete b/c - ahem - they've come back to me after 2 months of the last project and asked for another copy!!! But, I've already added one external for this, I can't house their memories in various forms forever. So, if I do the disk image, I'll retain the ability to make the disk - that's exactly what I need. I've already been caught once by the dreaded "you've updated the move file" bug once, simply because I had opened the original iMovie project - and I had to build the whole DVD again (and it had 24 chapters!)
    Thanks so much for the counsel on the disk image - I had heard about it but just wasn't sure how I should directly apply it to these projects.
    Appreciate it!
    Alexa
    Message was edited by: akcorcoran

  • Aspect ratio when exporting full quality -- is this a bug?

    Hi,
    I'm new to iMovie. I'm really enjoying playing around with it and think it's a really nice tool and very intuitive. But there's one thing that is bothering me. I'm working with 16:9 aspect ratio (Widescreeen) as the project type which corresponds to how the movies were recorded (a Canon MVX4i or Optura 600 in the USA I think). Everything works fine until I try to export in full quality format (using Export). The .dv file only plays back in 4:3 aspect ratio. I tried using the Expert settings, with 16:9 set and both PAL and NTSC but QuickTime and Preview still only see the movie in 4:3 aspect. If I understand correctly, the aspect ratio is just a flag that is set somewhere.
    Is this a bug or am I missing something? I don't have QT Pro by the way?
    One more question: in expert settings for DV Export settings, does anyone have a recommendation for what I shold pick for DV Format, and Scan mode?
    Thanks very much in advance,
    David
    Powerbook G4   Mac OS X (10.4.4)  

    Hi David,
    This isn't entirely unique to DV. But in simplistic terms what happens is that the widescreen footage that you capture with your camera is the same resolution as square screen. The number of pixels (the dots that make up the picture) for PAL, which is the format used in Portugal I believe, is 720 x 576.
    The pixels are squashed into a kind of oblong shape but then when played on widescreen kit the pixels become square causing the picture to stretch sideways. When you view the footage in QT it simply shows the picture as is - meaning that it outputs the picture as 720x576 with the oblong display.
    However, when you view the footage in iMovie there's a flag in the file that tells iMovie that the footage is wide and therefore to stretch it accordingly.
    There's a differing opinion of whether this display difference in QT is a bug or a feature. As Dan says, if you want to display widescreen footage in QT you're better off exporting a widescreen QT movie using the expert settings:
    From within iMovie...
    - Select File --> Export from the menu
    - In the Quicktime section choose Compress Movie For "Expert Settings"
    - Click the Share button
    - In the save dialog box that pops up Select "Movie to QuickTime Movie" in the Export section
    - Click Option...
    - In the Movie Settings dialog box click on settings
    - Select DV - PAL from the compression type
    - Keep the Frame Rate at Current
    - In the Compressor settings choose your Quality
    - Set the scan mode to Interlaced
    - Set the Aspect Ratio to 16:9 ( this is the bit that tells QT to play in widescreen)
    - Click OK
    - In the sound section click the Setting button
    - In the sounds settings dialog box set the Format to Linear PCM
    - Set the channels to Stereo (L R)
    - Set the Rate to 48.000kHz
    - Set the Sample Rate Converter settings to Quality Normal and the Linear PCM Settings to a sample size of 16 bits.
    - Uncheck all the other options (Little Endian, Floating Point and Unsigned)
    - Click OK
    - Uncheck the Prepare for Internet Streaming box
    - Click OK and set a destination for your file.
    - Click save to compress the file.
    The resulting file that is created above should now show in QT as widescreen. However you should bear in mind that you should work off the raw DV file rather than this new created one in iMovie. As a rule of thumb you should be thinking a little bit about the output media of the file. So for example if your final output medium is DVD then you can continue to work in iMovie and iDVD without problem. If you want to create a QT file for viewing on your computer then it's advisable to create a seperate QT file for this pupose.
    If you'd like to know a little more about the way aspect ratios works here's some links for you:
    Wikipedia
    World easiest explanation of anamorphic 16:9
    Hope this makes a little more sense now and sorry if I've covered stuff you already know. Hopefully this information will be of use to you but post back if you need more help.
    Cheers.
    David.
    PowerMac G4 Dual 1.25Ghz / 1GB RAM   Mac OS X (10.4.5)   PowerBook 12" 1Ghz / 768MB RAM

  • Exporting Video at Full Quality

    I made a short 2 minute film in iMovie and I would like to export it to Quicktime with the full quality option. For some reason, when i click it, the blue status bar shows up as if it is working, but the blue on the bar moves incredibly quickly and never reaches the end. Then when I open up the Quicktime file it created, the music from my movie plays, but just a still frame from the movie appears. Anyone know why this is happening? It lets me export it to quicktime in the other forms, just not at full quality.
    Thanks!

    Hi
    *Not knowing the origin to Your problem - General approach when in trouble is as follows.*
    • Free space on internal (start-up) hard disk if it is less than 10Gb should rather have 25Gb
    • *Hard disk is untidy. Repair Permissions*, Repair Hard disk (Apple Disc Util tool)
    • Garageband-fix. Start it, Play a note and Close it. Re-try (Corrects an audio problem that hinders iMovie)
    • *Delete iMovie pref file* - or rather start a new user/account - log into this and re-try
    iMovie pref file resides.
    Mac Hard Disk (start-up HD)/Users/"Your account"/Library/Preferences and is named. com.apple.iMovie.plist
    While iMovie is NOT RUNNING - move this file out to desk-top.
    Now restart iMovie.
    • Third party plug-ins that doesn't work OK (not relevant for iMovie’08 or 09)
    • Program miss-match. iMovie 5.0.2, up to Mac OS X.4.11 AND QuickTime 7.4.1 - is OK
    • Program miss-match. iMovie 6.0.3 or 6.0.4, Mac OS X.4.11 AND QuickTime 7.4.1 - is OK (might work under Leopard)
    • Program miss-match. iMovie’08 v. 7.0.1, Mac OS X.4.11 AND QuickTime 7.4.1 - is OK (might work under Leopard)
    • Screen must be set to Million-colors
    From LKN 1935. (in this case = iMovie HD (5), I tried it all, but nothing worked.
    Your answer (above) has been helpfull insofar as all the different trials led to the conclusion that
    there was something wrong with my iMovie software. I therefore threw everything away and reinstalled
    iMovie from the HD. After that the exportation of DV videos (there has not been any problem with HDV videos)
    to my Sony camcorders worked properly as it did before.
    Yours Bengt W

Maybe you are looking for

  • Mkmapview on zoom in or zoom out consumes lot of memory

    Hello, In my application i am using mkmapview as the main view and showing images (around 75 images) on the map by annotation. on zoom in or zoom out mapview consumes lot of memory and after some time it recives memory warning then application gets c

  • How can we Make trial version for our Midlet..

    Hellow ! I am having my Midlet application completed successfully.. I want to give it to my client for demo.. so which is the best way to make my application for trial version? Means that client can only open that application for 10 times... Premal

  • .Mac deleting my messages!?!

    Yesterday I had over 400 messgaes in my inbox. I leave them there since there is a lot of business correspondence I reference. Today I have 54 messages in my inbox; all I have done was run a .mac sync this morning. The 400 missing messages do not app

  • After installing last version 11.0.0.163 itunes crash at startup.

    i have a windows 7 64bit notebook with 12GB Ram i updated Itunes to the last version (before i used 10.7 version ) After the upgrade itunes don't start ! If i double click on the icon start itype process after few second start  ipoint.exe process and

  • Methods of installing tiger...

    So I just picked up a 667 tibook from a friend. My ibook died, logic board problem and this one was sitting around so she gave it to me. I'm trying to do a fresh install of tiger and all I have are the tiger CD's, the four discs. The problem is, the