Encoding 1080i/1920

Can anyone suggest  reasonable quality/ size setting for encoding 1080i/1920 footage from PremierePro cs5 for playback on a PC connected to a HDTV.
Sig

The sentence is a contradiction. Playback from PR does not need encoding. Just playback. Otherwise, if you meant something different, explain.

Similar Messages

  • 16:9 Encoding Question

    Hi: I am trying to encode a 1920 x 1080 HD file as an SD file.
    Is it possible to encode the HD file so that it appears letter boxed on a 4:3 television, but "pops" out to 16:9 when played back on a 16:9 monitor?
    If so, any advice on the settings? Thank you.

    Hi Ken,
    Thanks for taking the time to put more thought into this issue.
    The original file is a QT file that was digitized from an HDCAM master. It is 1920 x 1080, interlaced, with an 8 bit uncompressed codec. The file size is almost a terabyte.
    I have conducted several tests by authoring a DVD in DVD SP that I played back on the computer, using DVD Player, as well as on several different DVD player setups attached to both a standard 4:3 CRT monitor and a 16:9 LCD monitor.
    In each case, I did not get the result I was going for. My goal is to compress the original file so that it will play back letterboxed on a 4:3 CRT monitor, but play back full screen on a 16:9 monitor.
    I don't know if it is possible to encode a single file to achieve both of these goals, and that is what I am trying to determine.
    In my original tests, I used the presets in Compressor for 120 minutes of source footage. (The film is 109 minutes).
    I tried it both in its default state, and also by checking off the 16:9 option in Frame Controls.
    My suspicion is that I must start with an anamorhpic file - 1440 x 1080 (?) - to achieve this goal, but I welcome any further advice you may be able to offer.
    Once again, thanks.
    Best,
    Michael

  • MPEG2 Encoder

    What is the best MPEG2 Encoded available for the Mac? I'd be encoding at 1920*1080 and 1280*720.

    Bit Vice, Compressor, Sorenson Squeeze, Cleaner are among the best. There's also iDVD, DVD-SP and Toast.
    -DH

  • Apple TV resolutions

    I've read that the Apple TV supports HD 720p/1080i resolution. But movies for sale on iTunes are 480p, right? There are presently no HD movies available for sale on the iTunes Store. Is that correct?
    So, does the Apple TV, over component video connection, upscale 480p iTunes Store movies to 720p or 1080i? Or is it straight 480p? (As a pre-Apple TV purchase test, I downloaded what I'm assuming is a standard-def TV show from iTunes in widescreen (the "Raines" pilot) and played it via the iPod composite audio/video output to my HDTV, and frankly, I was pretty much blown away by the quality. And I'm 99% sure there's no way the iPod video upscales over composite. So it's not a deal-breaker; I'd just like to know if the Apple TV upscales over component connections.)
    And, if I were to download some of the sample HD content from Apple, like say the BBC stuff, would it play at 720p or 1080i on the Apple TV, or will it only play at 480p?
    Last question, when TV shows first became available on the iTunes Store there were only sold at iPod video resolution, like 320x240 or something like that. Then when they started selling movies, they started selling them and new TV shows at H.264 640x480 -- 480p. Did they go back to all the old TV shows they sell and upgrade those to H.264 640x480, 480p, too, or leave them at the old iPod video resolution? And if they did not, and there's mixed resolution content on the Store, how can I tell if what I'm buying is 480p or the old, lower iPod video resolution -- before I buy it.

    I've read that the Apple TV supports HD 720p/1080i resolution.TV supports input file formats up to 720p24/25 (1280 x 720 @ 23.98/24 fps NTSC or 25 fps PAL). On the other hand, it can output various signals compatible with the specific HDTV and interface to which it is connected. E.g., most HDTVs may offer 1080i (1920 x 1080 interlaced), 720p (1280 x 720 progressive), 480p (854 x 480 progressive), or 480i (640 x 480 interlaced) settings via the HDMI or component interface, as well as, 576p (1024 x 576 progressive) or 576i depending on the TV. If connected to a PC DVI interface, a whole new range of PC compatible formats may also be available. It all depends on the TV and the interface used.
    But movies for sale on iTunes are 480p, right?No, I believe you are limited to "Baseline" and "LC" H.264 content which limits limits dimension to within 640 x 480 depending on aspect ratio. I have never purchased any files but have downloaded some of the "free" samples encoded as 640 x 480 and 320 x 180 files.
    There are presently no HD movies available for sale on the iTunes Store. Is that correct?As far as I know this is correct. (As I say, I am not what you might call a "regular ITMS customer.")
    So, does the Apple TV, over component video connection, upscale 480p iTunes Store movies to 720p or 1080i? Or is it straight 480p?Scaling depends on your HDTV, your TV output settings, and the format of the file itself. Generally speaking, a 16:9 file will be displayed at full screen dimension on a "widescreen" HDTV. A 2.35:1 movie will be displayed "letterboxed" top and bottom. And, a 4:3 aspect ratio content will be display "pillared" left and right. If your HDTV has a native resolution of 1920 x 1080 and your TV is set to output at 1080i and your input file is 720p, then yes, the movie will be upscaled to match your HDTV. On the other hand, if your HDTV has a 1280 x 720 native resolution and your TV is set for 720p output, then no scaling is required. On the other hand, either of these HDTVs playing the 720p input file via the 480p TV setting would downscale playback for an 854 x 480 or equivalent screen display. In addition, depending on your particular TV model and mode, various "scaling effects" may also be available. These may range form horizontal fill to justified horizontal fills to zooms.
    (As a pre-Apple TV purchase test, I downloaded what I'm assuming is a standard-def TV show from iTunes in widescreen (the "Raines" pilot) and played it via the iPod composite audio/video output to my HDTV, and frankly, I was pretty much blown away by the quality.This scaling was done by the HDTV alone. Some models have excellent scalers built in. Others less so. On mine the TV scaler is better than the one in the TV, so I see quite a bit of improvement watching the same file via TV as opposed to my iPod via the TV's composite input.
    And I'm 99% sure there's no way the iPod video upscales over composite.No, as indicated above, the scaling here was performed by your HDTV and not the iPod.
    And, if I were to download some of the sample HD content from Apple, like say the BBC stuff, would it play at 720p or 1080i on the Apple TV, or will it only play at 480p?As indicated above, it will play at the "scaled" resolution you select as the TV resolution setting and as is negotiated/avialable on your particular HDTV. Be advised, however, that if the input file is encoded at greater than 720p or has a frame rate greater than 24/25 fps at 1280 x 720 encode dimensions, or has a video data rate well in excess of 5.0 Mbps, it may not be playback compatible with the TV device without re-conversion.
    Did they go back to all the old TV shows they sell and upgrade those to H.264 640x480, 480p, too, or leave them at the old iPod video resolution? And if they did not, and there's mixed resolution content on the Store, how can I tell if what I'm buying is 480p or the old, lower iPod video resolution -- before I buy it.Based on the "free" samples, I would assume there is still some "mixed" content out there. However, it should be relatively easy to determined what content is which. One way would be to simply play the trailer/preview and see what it looks like. Another, possibly better method is to simply compare the running time against the file size. Since the 480i (640 x 480) "Low Complexity" files are encoded at roughly twice the video data rate of the older "Baseline" H.264 files, it is esay to tell them apart. For instance an average 2-hour "LC" movie will run between 1.2 and 1.6 GBs in file size. A "Baseline" (320 x 240) version of the same file would likely only be 600-800 MBs in size.

  • Export settings for HD TV commercial

    Hi folks,
    Major novice here so please bear with me.
    I've cut a 30-second spot for my company and need to submit it to the station that will air it. They have provided the following instructions and I'm trying to make sure I get this formatted and encoded properly for broadcast. A lot of this technical talk is new to me. Can anyone help?
    HD Requirements:
    1080i 59.94 fps / Stereo*
    DG FastChannel (HD Code GOLFH-CN) or
    Sony HDCAM  or Sony XDCAM tape (no HDCAM-SR)*
    Aspect ratio (16:9) no postage stamp (center-cut protected)
    *TGC will accept discreet stereo or dual mono audio L&R…TGC cannot accept Dolby E, mini tapes or anamorphic spots at this time.
    I set the project properties to 1080i / 1920 x 1080 / 29.97i  (I see no option in FCPX for 59.94 -- I hope this is just the same as 29.97i) / stereo / 48kHz / Apple ProRes 422.
    I'm not sure if there are other settings I need to apply nor what options to select at export -- e.g. there are video codecs that say things like "XDCAM"...
    I plan on ultimately delivering this file electronically or on DVD... i.e. no tape.
    Thanks!

    When you say you hope to deliver by DVD; I hope you realize that DVD VIDEO is a standard def. format, and does not seem suitable for your needs.
    However, if you are talking about using a DVD disc for data  delivery, then you can ignore this particular post...

  • Mac Mini + DVI- HDMI + Toshiba 42RV530U = black screen

    Hi all, I have a new Intel Mac Mini 2GHz and a Toshiba 42RV530U REGZA HDTV that I'm trying to connect, with only a black screen so far.
    I believe the DVI output on the Mini is working - I can at least get a picture with a DVI-S-Video cable, but it's obviously lower resolution. The DVI-HDMI cable works - I tried it on our cable box.
    When the DVI-HDMI cable is hooked up to the HDMI-1 input on the TV, the "No Signal" warning vanishes, but it's replaced by a black screen. No amount of fiddling with SwitchResX has worked so far.
    I've tried coming up with values for SwitchResX based on these numbers from the manual (don't know why the H Freq and V Freq give 2 values for each). I couldn't get exact values, but pretty close. I'd ideally like to get 1080p working.
    Name Resolution Vert Freq Horizontal Freq Pixel Clock
    480i 720 × 480i 59.940/60Hz 15.734/15.750kHz 27.000/27.027MHz
    480p 720 × 480p 59.940/60Hz 31.469/31.500kHz 27.000/27.027MHz
    720p 1280 × 720p 59.940/60Hz 44.955/45.000kHz 74.176/74.250MHz
    1080i 1920 × 1080i 59.940/60Hz 33.716/33.750kHz 74.176/74.250MHz
    1080p 1920 × 1080p 23.976/24Hz 26.973/27.000kHz 74.176/74.250MHz
    1080p 1920 × 1080p 59.940/60Hz 67.433/67.500kHz 148.352/148.500MHz
    I've also tried repairing permissions, rebooting many times, deleting the windowserver.plist files, zapping the PRAM, etc. SwitchResX identifies the TV as "TSB-TV", which sounds the same as other posts with different Toshiba TVs. I'm able to remote into the Mini via Remote Desktop Connection to play with settings, etc.
    Any suggestions? Would a DVI to Component cable work? The TV does have an analog RGB in, but this won't support high def. Thanks for any help!
    -Frank

    An unforeseen twist... I tried hooking up the Mac Mini to a DVI computer monitor, also with no picture. When I hook up my Powerbook to the Toshiba via the DVI->HDMI cable.... Picture! So, looks like my new (refurbed) Mac Mini has a bad digital video output. Seems a little strange though, since the analog video output on it is working fine.
    Off to the Mac store tomorrow.

  • Cannot see zoom effect

    After setting up a zoom on a still image it looks fine when using "play output"  in the pan/zoom tool preview window but when I return to the timeline view and play that clip it doesn't display properly. Instead it shows the initial frame with something looking like the zoom effect going on behind it.
    Can I not view the actual zoom effect for a clip after setting it up and returning to the timeline view?  I will be grateful for any insight.
    Still image is a .psd 1613 x 1080 in a project that is HD 1080i 1920 x 1080 (so the still image has black bars at both sides--which is the way I want it)
    OS: Windows 7 Ultimate x64

    Thank you to all three of you (Steve, Vipul, Bill) who took the time to answer and make suggestions.
    I have uploaded two videos showing : 1) view in effect preview window and 2) view in timeline.
    However, I think I may have done something wrong to begin with because when I created a new project and used the same source psd file to do the same kind of zoom effect it displayed perfectly both in the effect preview window and in the timeline.
    Accordingly, because I can do what I want to do--get the proper zoom effect--I'm not going mess around with that original clip anymore.
    What I did wrong with the original clip, I don't know, but I think that perhaps I was trying to make the orginal clip too short and that messed up the program. The new project clip with zoom that I created was a few seconds long.

  • Blu-Ray Mystery

    Hi everyone,
    I am editing my film in premeire elements 10. My project setting is HD 1080i, 1920 x 1080  29.97 fps.  I recently started to practice burning blu-ray's to my work in progress movie, just so i am ready when everything is completed. However, until rcently, i did not own a blu-ray player but I learned on this board how to view my blu-ray disk  on my computer by opening up  the appalicable  drive and drilling through the directory until  reaching a file that is always named 00000. (and then opening via Windows Media Player)  The one thing I have noticed about that file, is that it is not quite as heavy as the .m2t file that gets created when I just export directly to my computer with a similar  AVCHD 1920 x 1080 setting.  However after viewing both files several times on my computer, i never could  a diference in quality between the blue ray disk and the exported .m2t file. I also have RGB cables that connect my compoter to my HDTV so every once in a while, I' watch various scenes on the bigger screen to gage how it looks.  Never had any problems, that is until I played my blu-ray disk on an actual Blu-ray palyer for the first time and i was horrified to hee how pixelated the picture looked. I also noiced that things  were getting slightly  cut off.  For example, a sign that appears  at the top off the frame  was missing the very upper part of the top letters. However if I take that same blue ray disk, put it in my computer, and project on the same exact  HDTV via my rgb cables, the probelme goes away.. no pixelation, no isues with the framing. So it almost looks to me liek tehre is an issue with my blu-ray player as oppsoed to the way I am burning my blu-ray disks.  Unfortunately i do not have access to a second blu-ray machine to test that theory so i wanted to get the opinion of the board on what is a mystery to me. How a blu-ray can play fine on a computer but crappy in a blu-ray player.

    I plan to test out some alternate burning methods early next week to see if I can duplicate the error of no fast forward and no rewind on a blu-ray.   In the meantime, I had a bit of a breakthorugh with the second issue from this   trail, the pixelation. For the first time, I was able to duplciate the error on a computer. (as opposed to just seeing it on an HDTV)  This is huge becasue I can now send around screenshots of what I am seeing. While I am thankful tohhave learned about autoscan and believe that is certainly playig a role in this "picture quality" issue, this shows there may be something more. First off, to get the specs out of the way, I am using Premiere Elements 10 in a full HD, 1920 x 1080 rroject setting. For this recent test, I exported my movie to a mst-h264 1920x1080i 30 setting.  (my normal protocol for HD exports)  The first screenshot is from Windows Media Player at full screen and shows the clear picture I am used to seeing when I view my movie on a computer.  However, by merely clicking the arrow on Windows Media Player to take it out of "full screen", (second screenshot)  it produces the intermittent pixelation that I was seeing on my TV , specifically when people are  in motion.  (and this is even more pronounced than what i was seeing on my television) What is even stranger is that clicking the arrow back to full screen does not resolve the issue. The only way to remove the pixelation is to close out the file and open it up again from scratch in the full screen view.  The third and final  final screenshot was taken from my Real Audio player which I am now  realizing is an awful picture , regardless of whether it is in full screen or not.  All 3 screenshots were taken from the same exact computer.
    I would love to hear possible theories on this  inconsistent picture as I am happy with  how it looks on Windows Media Full screen and hoping  to duplicate that result in all scenarios.
    Thanks for your time!!!

  • Lagging pixels on video while editing and after render-export. -How do I fix this? the original media is Crystal clear.

    Hello guys,
    I am trying to edit some gameplay footage I captured using "AverMedia Game Capture HD", but whenever I import the media (at 1080i),
    There are pixels that hang on the video player, mostly when the camera is turning left to right,
    and on occasion, some random color blurs that bloom out of nowhere.
    I attached a image so you can see what it looks like:
    Here is what the video looks like after it is rendered and exported.
    Along with the visual pixels, it also displays horizontal lines. (possibly due to my export settings, I was in a hurry just to test it)
    Both the capture device and final cut pro x are upgraded to the latest firmware/updates.
    I am using HD AC Component cables (blue green red) both for in and out connections between ps3 - cap device - tv.
    The capture device automatically records files to mpeg-4.
    The resolution of the tv, and recorded footage is in 1080i (1920 × 1080) and the quality looks great when I play it through quick time or any other media players:
    Any tips or info? I have been using Final Cut pro  x since it was released. I am not a professional but I have used it for some very important jobs thorugout the year, but I am really stumped with this.
    Overview:
    -Media info
    File Type: mpeg-4
    Codec: H.264, AAC
    Dimensions: 1080i (1920 × 1080)
    Thankyou for the help!

    Alright, lets get the good news out first:
    Converting the file definitely fixed the pixel issues.
    However, there where frequent "blips" of some frames that disturbed the video.
    Also, the converter created a 5GB file that was originally around 300MB!!
    It put a serious load on importing, rendering and transcode analysis, however the video played back smoothly, it would be perfect despite the large file size and frequent frame glitches.
    This is all due to my lack of knowledge in video property conversion.
    At this point, I feel that I am asking for too much, but I am really stumped...
    I can try so many possibilities, but this would save me allot of time if I could get the help:
    What converter settings should choose to have the optimal video file that,
    plays back smoothly,
    plays In HD,
    is compatible with fcp,
    and can still stay moderately low on file size?
    Here is the current info on the RAW video file:
    Here are the previous settings I used to convert:
    (slight improvemnt, but extremely high file size, and still has some frame glitches)
    What should I have (not?) done with these options?
    (I admit I chose these settings and had no Idea what the heck I was doing)
    Again, thank you for your help, I really appreciate it.
    EDIT:
    For reference, This is the new glitch issue I see:
    Here is the normal frame,
    Here is the next frame when a glitch apears.
    It seems to be replying a previous frame in the video.
    Also, the horozontal lines do not show during live playback, only when the play head is paused, or when scrubbing.

  • Why is video size different to original when exporting from Premiere Pro CS6 to Encore?

    Hi there
    My source files in Premiere Pro are 1920 x 1080.
    When I export the sequence to Encore to burn to a DVD the size in the burned DVD changes to 720 x 576
    In Encore project area I have these two entries
    The encoding settings for the above two entries are
    this (for the first entry above)...
    and this (for the second entry above)...
    It does not seem to be possible to change the encoding to 1920 x 1080 for the first enry and as such the video is being burned as 720x576.
    How can I fix this? What am I doing wrong?

    DVD is 720x576 you cannot change that.
    If you want 1920x1080 which is HD you need to make a BluRay.
    You can however make an AVCHD disk which is HD on DVD.
    About 20 minutes will fit on a DVD and will only (but not all) BluRay players.

  • Hardware options

    Hi all. I am looking for options to speed up H.264 encoding of 1080i material. I'm wondering if anyone can suggest any hardware add-ons for a MacBook Pro. The Turbo.264 HD always outputs progressive video, but I am encoding 1080i video so it is of no use to me. Are there other USB, firewire, or Express card accelerators? I would like to avoid occupying my primary machine for 36 hours at a time.
    Or, will setting up a cluster with a CoreDuo MacBook dramatically speed up encoding, or is it a drop in the bucket?
    Also, I have a G4 tower which is unused. I don't think it will run compressor, so I don't think I can use it. Any other ideas? It has PCI slots, but I would imagine the processor to be a limiting factor.
    Thanks much.
    Jeremy

    I appreciate you asking, because this seems to be overlooked in various forums. This is home video, which is 1080i60 HDV. I know that many people pursue a "film look" by deinterlacing to 30p or 24p, but it just looks less like video and more like a cheap movie. At least, it does when watching our home movies. The motions is less lifelike, since in the original something moves 60 times a second, but not after deinterlacing.
    A good example is how we have been watching our videos in the first place. We have a projector, so flaws in the video get blown up. I tried plugging my Mac in, and the video was deinterlaced by the nature of the video connection. It looked unnatural, and not like the original. VLC could play the original HDV and do a bob deinterlace (making 1080p60) but my machine could barely keep up and dropped a number of frames. We settled on a PS3 as a blu-ray player and media interface. As long as the HDV files are wrapped as mpeg transport streams, the PS3 plays them at the proper frame rate (or I should say "field rate").
    Now we have too much footage to fit on the PS3 hard drive, and I would like to be able to put it onto a disc. I've decided H.264 is the way to go, but I do not want 1080p30 because it looses the realism (for home video) and 1080p60 would double the filesize. I would rather let the PS3 or projector do the deinterlacing on the fly.
    Thanks for your question.
    Jeremy

  • Inconsistent Aspect Radio upon Export

    Good Morning,
    I'm having trouble keeping my aspect ratios clean when I export my project to a file. My project settings are:
    Editing Mode HD 1080i
    Frame Size- 1920 x 1080 (16:9)
    In making the movies, I tend to do a lot of zooming on stills as well as videos. In the editor, the borders of my source file are ALWAYS outside the project frame (so that the entire frame is filled with image, no black space), but when I export it, I'm seeing the black edge of the frame on some clips, as if the export frame size got bigger than it was in the project. It's hard to describe so I hope that makes sense.
    When I export, I'm using "NTSC Standard" but making sure to set the aspect ratio to 16:9 to fit my project settings.
    Can someone please explain how to export projects so that the aspect ratios match and are clean, without any unexpected black space appearing in certain clips?
    Thank you.

    akpasta
    The first thing we need to do is learn what your source is.
    Right now we almost have enough to proceed with confidence
    1920 x 1080 pixels 16:9
    29.97 frames per second
    But what is lacking is whether you are shooting interlaced or progressive video, 1080i or 1080p.
    Can you determine that from your camera settings?
    If you have 1080i, then your project preset =
    NTSC
    AVCHD
    Full HD1080i30
    If you have 1080p, then your project preset =
    NTSC
    DSLR
    1080p
    DSLR 1080p30 or DSLR 1080p30 @ 29.97
    If not from the camera settings, we could get the answer, i or p, from the MediaInfo properties readout (its Tree View)
    http://sourceforge.net/projects/mediainfo/
    Be careful of your download and install here so that you do not get unwanted programs and toolbars as well as the valuable MediaInfo program.
    For now let us assume that your camera is recording 1080i (1920 x 1080 @ 29.97 interlaced frames per second).
    New question becomes what are the requirements of your viewing via your player. Let us try the following export choices:
    If you really want a MPEG export
    HD 16:9
    Publish+Share/Computer/MPEG and set Presets = MPEG2 1920 x 1080i30
    That will give you a MPEG2 HD.m2t file (1920 x 1080 @ 29.97 interlaced frames per second).
    SD Widescreen 16:9
    Publish+Share/Computer/MPEG and set Presets = NTSC DVD Widescreen.
    That will give you a MPEG1.mpg file (720 x 480 @ 29.97 interlaced frames per second)
    But you might want to consider
    Publish+Share/Computer/AVCHD with Presets = MP4 H.264 1920 x 1080p30
    for AVCHD.mp4 1920 x 1080 @ 29.97 progressive frames per second
    or
    Publish+Share/Computer/AVCHD with Presets = MP4 NTSC DV Widescreen
    for AVCHD.mp4 720 x 480 @ 29.97 progressive frames per second.
    Please check out the above to see if they work for you.
    I am guessing that you went off track with your 4:3 export setting for your 16:9 project and subsequent attempts to resolve that.
    We will be watching for your follow up.
    Any clarification needed, please do not hesitate to ask.
    Thanks.
    ATR

  • 5.1 surround question

    I am trying to get an HD edit from FCP to SD DVD with 5.1 surround sd & can't seem to figure out how to do it.
    found this link & tried that, but it did not work for some reason.
    http://www.kenstone.net/fcphomepage/5-1_surround_soundFCS2.html
    Am working at another facilty on their G5 with FCP 5 (not sure which version it is right now as it is not my suite). Project is HD 1080i, 10 bit uncompressed. I received the 5.1 audio files from the post facility & followed the instructions above, but it did not work. not sure why.
    Picture on test SD DVD looks fine, but audio is stereo & not 5.1 surround.
    Does anybody have another workflow?
    Or have any suggestions about what I may be doing wrong? THANKS!

    HD 1080i (1920 X 1080) exported from FCP as video only (FCP 5 on G5)
    post house provided 6 aiffs (5.1 mix files).
    imported QT that was exported from FCP into compressor - used mpeg-2 setting from DVD 90 min best quality, then selected "add surround sound" button - at top left next to "add file".
    this opens a window that gives you 7 channels to add tracks to (click on each one & select the proper track).
    I had the L, C, R, LFE, Ls, and Rs tracks provided by the post audio guy. Left the S option blank.
    I did a test & added Dolby audio setting from DVD 90 min best quality & also tried the Dolby Digital Professional 5.1 setting from the FORMATS - AUDIO folder.
    Was told by Producer that they both worked as the suite I was in did not have surround sd speakers for a quality check.
    One problem I ran into was to try & run the audio through compressor without compressing the video simultaneously. It downconverted it to a stereo mix from the 5.1 files. redid it with the video being compressed again simultaneously & that worked. Took about 4-5 hrs to compress, which is why I ended up doing the tests mentioned above, but with 30 sec clips instead of the 50 min project.

  • PAL Presets for Blu Ray

    i have a project shot on the Sony EX1 at 1920 x 1080 p. I want to export using ADOBE MEDIA ENCODER to 1920 x 1080 progressive 25 FPS. Most options are for US standards, when I click PAL it only offers interlaced.
    If 1920 x 1080 Progressive 25 fps is not possible for blu ray, what settings do you suggest?

    1080p @ 25 fps is not part of the Blu-ray spec. Call Sony and complain.

  • I am exporting a 2 min video, using a custom compressor setting. i have not had issues with this setting in the past, but recently its taking upwards of 4 hours to process. Any idea what is going on?

    I am exporting a 2 min video, using a custom compressor setting. I have not had issues with this setting in the past, but recently its taking upwards of 4 hours to process. Any idea what is going on?

    Name: Vimeo HD Encode
    Description: No description
    File Extension: mov
    Estimated size: 2.3 GB/hour of source
    Audio Encoder
              AAC, Stereo (L R), 44.100 kHz
    Video Encoder
              Width: 1920
              Height: 1080
              Pixel aspect ratio: Square
              Crop: None
              Padding: None
              Frame rate: (100% of source)
              Frame Controls On:
                        Retiming: (Best) High quality Motion Compensated
                        Resize Filter: Statistical Prediction
                        Deinterlace Filter: Best (Motion Compensated)
                        Adaptive Details: On
                        Antialias: 0
                        Detail Level: 0
                        Field Output: Progressive
              Codec Type: H.264
              Multi-pass: On, frame reorder: On
              Pixel depth: 24
              Spatial quality: 75
              Min. Spatial quality: 25
              Key frame interval: 30
              Temporal quality: 50
              Min. temporal quality: 25
              Average data rate: 5.12 (Mbps)
    Compatible with Mac
    My video in the timeline is 1920 x 1080 / 23.98 fps
    I've installed Toast and photoshop elements recently, i also updated my apps the other day.
    I have had this problem before the updates of the apps though

Maybe you are looking for

  • Sync issue with DVDs

    Hi there. I need some advice or random thoughts. Whenever I burn a DVD from an HD QT file, I find that I have to advance the picture by 3 or 4 frames to be in sync. Am I doing something wrong? Does anyone else have this issue? I am shooting HDV, goin

  • Photos in some events have disappeared....

    Photos in some events have disappeared leaving a grey image of a sunset and palm tree. I have tried rebuilding iPhoto 11, but no change. What can I do to restore these?

  • External Hard Drive Usage between Mac and PC

    I have a WD Passport SE 1 terabyte hard drive that I have backed up my PC (Windows XP) files on. I want to transfer files onto my Macbook Pro (OS X) but it comes up as read only. I've been reading a lot of different forums and stories about not being

  • Standard Transaction to reset mass users password?

    Hi, Is there any Standard SAP transaction to reset password for mass users at a given time? Appreciate your response. Regards,

  • New site about J2ME game programming and optimization

    Hello! I just wanted to tell you about a new J2ME development site SupremeJ2ME found at http://supremej2me.bambalam.se It has a lot of useful guides and tips about mobile J2ME game development and optimization, a forum and information about the best