Need High quality fla to dvd playable file converter

Hi,
I'm making a project in swf which has got audio, video and images. I need to release this project in flash format and DVD format also.
Could anyone suggest me any High quality fla to dvd converter ? I just used trial versions of Moyea and few others before deciding to buy but they don't convert in high quality.
Even if they do, The file size becomes really too big. For instance just a 10 mb file becomes 4 gb.
Please suggest some good converters.
Thanks.

Did you render the Timeline fully?
Just so you'll know, the Viewer in FCE/FCP is just that; a viewer that shows the image at it's native resolution. The Canvas (and Firewire output) shows the image at the Sequence resolution - not the original resolution of the image.
If you're not going to be pushing in to (zooming in) the image, you should resize the images so they're close to your Sequence resolution. For example, if you're working in an NTSC DV Sequence, the resolution will be 720x480 (rectangular pixels). If your images are much larger than that, it may be part of the problem.
-DH

Similar Messages

  • I'm a bit confused. Since my original camera format was 720/60p, and I converted the footage to Pro Res422 in order to edit in Final Cut Pro 7, should I convert back to a higher quality format before sending the file to DVD Studio Pro?

    I'm a bit confused. Since my original camera format was 720/60p, and I converted the footage to Pro Res422 in order to edit in Final Cut Pro 7, should I convert back to a higher quality format before sending the file to DVD Studio Pro? If so, which Compressor codec is best to use in order to preserve the original 720/60p?   How do I maintain the highest quality?

    No...ProRes is a high quality format. Finishing format.  Many TV networks take that as a final deliverable. 
    BUT...DVDs aren't high definition...they are SD.  You cannot make a 720p60 DVD with DVD Studio Pro.  Any DVD you make will be SD...720x480.  The only HD DVD format out there is BluRay, and for that you need a BluRay burner.
    As for making a high quality DVD...using the BEST QUALITY settings in Compressor will work:
    #42 - Quick and dirty way to author a DVD
    Shane's Stock Answer #42 - David Roth Weiss' Secret Quick and Dirty Way to Author a DVD:
    The absolute simplest way to make a DVD using FCP and DVDSP is as follows:
    1. Export a QT movie, either a reference file or self contained using current settings.
    2. Open DVDSP, select the "graphical" tab and you will see two little monitors, one blue, one green.
    3. Select the left blue one and hit delete.
    4. Now, select the green one, right click on it and select the top option "first play".
    5. Now drag your QT from the browser and drop it on top of the green monitor.
    6. Now, for a DVD from an HD source, look to the right side and select the "general tab" in the track editor, and see the Display Mode, and select "16:9 pan-scan."
    7. Hit the little black and yellow burn icon at the top of the page and put a a DVD in when prompted. DVDSP will encode and burn your new DVD.
    THATS ALL!!!
    NOW...if you want a GOOD LOOKING DVD, instead of taking your REF movie into DVD SP, instead take it into Compressor and choose the BEST QUALITY ENCODE (2 pass VBR) that matches your show timing.  Then take THAT result into DVD SP and follow the rest of the steps.  Except you can choose "16:9 LETTERBOX" instead of PAN & SCAN if you want to see the entire image.

  • How do I achieve a high quality PAL SD DVD from Final Cut Pro?

    From a PMW-EX1 camera file edited in Final Cut Pro I am unable to produce a high quality PAL SD DVD using compressor and DVD Studio Pro (tried multiple combinations).
    Using Final cut pro and Magic iDVD I can achieve a high quality SD DVD with no changes in export.But am limited to the iDVD restrictions.
    From discussions it appears using compressor and DVD Studio pro it is not achievable, it is very frustrating that the Apple product you have to buy is not as efficient as the free one?
    If not possible then how do I access the encoded file from IDVD?
    My Final cut pro sequence settings:
    General - Aspect ratio: HDTV 1080i (16:9) 1920x1080, square and upper(Odd)
    Quicktime video settings compressor: xdcam ex 1080i50 (35 mb/s vbr)
    I

    iDVD does everything automatically for you. With DVDSP and Compressor, all steps must be done correctly. The trade off is that you achieve better quality using Compressor over iDVD.
    1. First thing to do is export your sequence as an uncompressed interlaced 25i 720 x 576 16x9 Anamorphic QT.
    2. Determine your optimal bitrate by using a bitrate calculator. Here's a good one. Remember you need to account for all video on the disc, including motion menus.
    http://www.videohelp.com/calc.htm
    3. Bring your down converted QT into Compressor and use the manual settings set your bitrate. Also encode out a Dolby digital AC3 file. These files take up less bandwidth than uncompressed audio. Also remember to match your upper fiiled dominate filed order as well in Compressor. This must be consistent throughout the export and encoding stages.
    4. bring your encoded video and audio files into DVDSP and author

  • How to export a complex Keynote to high quality video for DVD?

    I have had dozens of attempts to turn a complex Keynote into a high quality video.
    Either they turn out disappointiingly way low res
    or they are very choppy with half the transitions gone
    or they Cannot make the video at all
    HELP.
    I need to turn this project in to my client today.

    If you use the DVD export in Keynote 3 with a self playing movie, the quality will be fine...just don't trust what you see on your mac screen, play it on a DVD player to check the quality. I did a test a while back and it was only the pauses that looked bad.
    Read about it here:
    http://www.keynoteuser.com/news/?p=135
    pay close attention to what I complain about...it's just the slide pauses, not the normal motion playback, which means selfplaying stuff looks pretty decent (though never as good as the original, but that's the fault of the DVD format, not Apple).

  • How do I create a High Quality Image with a low file size???

    Dear All,
    I am creating an invitation in Illustrator which I then place into photshop to create a JPEG. I want to create a high quality JPEG version of it but with a low file size because I am emailing the invitation. Am I correct in placing the image into photshop or should I export it from Illustrator.
    The image is built of of vectors and one JPEG but they are not high in quality.
    Can anyone help me please
    Thanks
    Ben

    The image is built of of vectors and one JPEG but they are not high in quality.
    For this type of image you would probably be better choosing GIF format (now known for some reason as 'Compuserve GIF'). Taking the number of "colors' down untl it still looks high quality, and anti-aliasing is preserved.

  • High quality format conversion for .mod files?

    I'm using MPEG Streamclip to convert .mod files to formats acceptable to FCE 3.0. I've tried a few dozen possibilities, but the files are either unreasonably huge (687 MB for 23 seconds of video) or of poor quality. Does anyone know of a high quality format that requires something on the order of 3.6 MB/min? A previous post (http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=4815749&#4815749) recommends DV or HDV, but MPEG Streamclip gives many options for DV. Any help would be much appreciated.

    They come from a Panasonic SDR-H200. The .mod clip in MPEG Streamclip looks great. Here's the information MPEG Streamclip gives for the clip:
    Type: MPEG program stream
    Duration: 0:00:23
    Data Size: 12.48 MB
    Bit Rate: 4.45 Mbps
    Video Tracks:
    224 MPEG-2, 704 × 480, 4:3, 29.97 fps, 9.54 Mbps, upper field first
    Audio Tracks:
    128 AC3 2/0, 48 kHz, 256 kbps
    Stream Files:
    MOV001.MOD (12.48 MB)

  • Need high quality compression for iDVD but don't want letterbox

    I have a FCE project which has moving stills, lots of titling and graphics (from Photoshop) and want a high quality compression to get rid of the interlacing, etc. I need to get this to iDVD.
    If I export as quicktime, it's just ok quality. If I use Sorenson or Animation (as recommended by the Apple creatives), the resulting project looks great but I have letterboxing on the top/bottom in iDVD, which I don't want. I'm using a 4:3 aspect ratio and my FCE project is 720x480.
    What am I doing wrong? I don't have the "preserve aspect using letterbox" checked but get the letter box anyway. (I tried it with this and have a thicker letterbox!)
    Thanks.

    If the material is 4:3 edited in a 4:3 there is no reason for iDVD to letterbox it, unless the iDVD preferences are set to widescreen.
    It's hard to tell where you're going wrong because there are so many variables along the way, and you haven't spelled out what you're doing, format, frame sizes, export settings, etc.
    Whoever told you to export to Sorenson or Animation is completely wrong. You should export to QuickTime Movie. iDVD only accept a couple of formats DV material and HDV in Apple Intermediate Codec, and HD is always widescreen. The HDV 720p format has no interlacing. These formats export from FCE with interlacing unless you switch it off in FCE. You can do this in Item Properties for the sequence. Set the Field Dominance to None.

  • What is "High Quality" standard for 150 minimum files?

    To be listed on iTunes U, there is a requirement of a minimun 150 "High Quality" media files. What is the description of "High Quality" ? Is this a technical standard or a content standard?

    Ryan C:
    https://code.msdn.microsoft.com/Azure-DocumentDB-NET-Code-6b3da8af
    Mimi G:
    http://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/documentdb-resources/

  • Which is the simplest version of acrobat to use to create high quality pdf from a doc file

    which is the simplest version of acrobat to use to create high quality pdf from a doc file

    Acrobat Standard.

  • I need high quality at smaller MB size!!

    I am looking for a solution for a problem i have been having.
    I have a .avi file that weighs 156MB. I want to convert it into .flv and play it over the web as a course. As you well know the .flv size i am loking for is around 30 MB. I have tried Flixpro for conversion, but it takes 5 hours to do the conversion and since the video has many fast moving flash animations in it; those areas have very poor quality.
    Then i tried Adobe flash media encoder. It takes far less time to do the same compression but gives a size that is even bigger than the .avi file!! and the out is better but it jitters here and there which is not at all aceptable. I am confused and need to come up with a solution at the earliest. So, any help is much appreciated.
    Anything i am missing in the process?? Please advice.
    thanks in advance

    What's your budget?
    Canon HF series is likely your best bet - These are high definition camcorders with pretty good lowlight performance, and they all have microphone input jacks.
    You may need an adapter or level converter to connect line-level outputs from your soundboard to the mic-level inputs.
    Another option is to go to some of JVC, Panasonic, or Canon's pro-level gear.  These are going to be very expensive though.
    *disclaimer* I am not now, nor have I ever been, an employee of Best Buy, Geek Squad, nor of any of their affiliate, parent, or subsidiary companies.

  • Higher quality presentation than dvd?

    Hello. My sequence will be DV NTSC 720x480. I will be cutting some DVCPRO HD 1080i60 into it but that may not be relevant. This video will be shown in front of many people at an event. Is there a step up, quality-wise, from playing a dvd via a projector? I can rent any equipment I need.
    Also, if this video is projected, I read somewhere that projectors use square pixels? If that true? And if so, how to I export the sequence for the event?
    Thanks a lot!

    My sequence will be DV NTSC 720x480
    Since your Sequence will be DV NTSC, you really can't improve over that. So to obtain the best quality feed to the projector, do a print to tape from FCP when you're finished with the edit and playback in a DV VTR or camcorder. A Y/C (S-Video) feed from the playback device will be better than a composite feed, but if you have a DV/DVCam VTR with a component output it would be even better.
    That said, what David Bogie Chq-1 said is true. You can get very good results with DVD-Video playback as long as the encoding is handled properly.
    -DH
    Message was edited by: David Harbsmeier

  • Is DVD Player higher quality than standalone DVD player?ne

    I tried finding an answer to this question with various searches and could not, but I apologize if this is a repeat question.
    I'm a teacher and I'm showing DVDs (not Blu-Rays) to my class. I have a fairly new LG HDTV in my classroom. I don' have the model number but it's an LCD, and I think it's a 52 inch. I'm trying to decide whether the picture quality of DVDs will be higher by playing them on my MacBook Pro or on a standalone DVD player. My MacBook is the 6,2 version (15 inch), so I can hook it up to the TV through the minidisplay port with an HDMI converter. I'm just using the DVDplayer software that came with the MacBook Pro. 
    The standalone DVD player has just standard audio/video connections--no HDMI port, (which I'm assuming doesn't really matter since I'm just using standard DVDs).
    Is there really going to be much difference, either visually or auditorially, between these two setups? It's about as easy to use either one, and from a quick visual comparison I can't see much difference, but I want the best quality I can get. So any advice would be appreciated.
    Thanks.

    No difference or worse from the MBP compared to a Real DVD player.
    A Real DVD player is designed to do one thing. That is to send a signal from a DVD disc to a TV screen. This can be done over coax cable, composite connections or HDMI cable. A computer does many things one of them is to play movie DVDs. But first it must go through all the electronics of the computer and then out through only one port and then be changed to a style of port the TV can accept.
    Also your MBP will get HOT when you are using it for this purpose. Just load up a DVD and watch how hot it gets displaying in on the internal screen.
    So use the Real DVD player.

  • I want high quality SD for DVD

    alright, i've got a 1.1 gig video about 5 minutes long that is in the .mov format (raw out of fcp). I'll let you know what I have already done and if you could, please let me know where I could improve. I took the .mov video and put it in compressor. Told it to convert to mpeg-2 and make a 2-pass VBR best quality. After being compressed, I dropped the .m2v video and dolby soundtrack into dvd studio pro and burned the baby. Looks pretty good, anything I should do to make it even clearer?

    Check out this site:
    http://osxdaily.com/2012/04/22/format-drive-mac-pc-compatible/
    That will show you how to format a USB stick for use on both PC and Mac.
    If the problem continues take it to an Apple store and have them check it out.
    >Also what s exFAT?<
    From:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ExFAT
    "exFAT (Extended File Allocation Table) is a Microsoft file system optimized for flash drives.[3] It is proprietary and patented."
    That first site explains it at length.

  • Dvd and file converter that actually works

    ive tried so many programs to try and convert files and dvds, but none seem to work. ive tried videora converter quicktime pro and a bunch of other stuff. does anyone know anything that will help me for my windows comp

    Mon,
    You really need to stop posting new threads on the same topic.
    See one thread through. I'm sure you're just doing something wrong.
    Posting more and more threads about the same thing, and your same frustration, doesn't serve any purpose but to frustrate those that are genuinely trying to help you.

  • High Quality Display -appears corrupted

    Hello,
    I have a problem with High Quality display of placed TIF files (InDesign CS3 5.0.4). When viewed at high magnification the image is replaced by a solid black with diagonal black & white lines across the top section.
    I've read through the archives of display performance issues and tried the suggestions, but have been unsuccessful in resolving the issue:
    1) Restored preferences
    Ensured the following options are selected:
    2) Object Display Performance > High Quality
    3) View > Display Performance > Allow Object Level Display Settings
    Placement of the image is critical with what I do, so because the issue is normally associated with CMYK TIFs I can usually use a Gray TIF to position correctly, then replace this with the CMYK version. However, the more complex the layout becomes, the Gray TIF too becomes "corrupted" at a high zoom factor. Of course, the exported PDF is always true, but I really need to view truly at high magnification in InDesign.
    I close all other applications to ensure it is not a RAM problem, but to no avail. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
    Thank you.
    MacBook Pro 2.33 GHz Intel Core Duo
    3GB 667 MHz DDR2 SDRAM
    Mac OS X 10.4.11

    Marvin,
    The TIF file in this example consists of a repeating sequence of adjacent columns in the following configuration: 8 white pixel, 7 black pixels.
    This pattern repeats across the width of the file.
    I've attached one of these files below. Please try to view it at 4000% when placed in InDesign.
    (Please note that this problem also occurs with photographic images as well).
    If I then crop the attached file in Photoshop, re-save and place in InDesign it will preview correctly at 4000%.
    If I leave it at its original dimensions, but convert to a Gray TIF, it will preview correctly -for a while, but eventually also become "corrupted". As I mentioned in my initial post, I've had to use a Grey TIF to get the placement correct, then replace with the CMYK TIF version. Saving with and without LZW compression makes no difference. The fact that the Grey version works temporarily has got me confused. As it happens, for the moment anyway, a narrow width file in CMYK is previewing okay, but then in the past I've used TIFs just ~100 mm wide and had the same problem.

Maybe you are looking for

  • AS/400 TO ORACLE

    HI, I need to extract the data from AS/400 into oracle DB using ODI. If i need to create the file from AS/400 then load it into oracle DB how to do it in ODI? If i need to directly loading from as/400 into oracle db how to do that in ODI? Cheers

  • AVG problem with sqlite tracking cookies

    Every time I open Firefox I get an AVG warning about tracking cookies in Sqlite. I can't clean these cookies. AVG deny that there is a problem with AVG, so how can I fix this? I'm fed up of it and on the verge of going back to IE just so that I can o

  • I have a full Creative Cloud subscription. How do I add email hosting to my free website?

    I have a full Creative Cloud subscription. How do I add email hosting to my free hosted website?

  • Built-in camera inoperative

    Is there a way to troubleshoot/repair/bring back online the built-in camera on my intel Mac? In Photobooth and other applications, the left light next to the camera does not come on, and there is no camera activity.

  • Slow firewire transfer speed in Snow Leopard

    Hello, Everything works fine in Snow Leopard, besides copying large files to my external Freecom firewire hard drives. Having a dual boot system with also Leopard installed, the problem only exists in Snow Leopard. NVRAM/PRAM reset doesn't help. Does