Quicktime Movie Quality

Trying to create a movie on my VISTA computer with Pinnacle Studio 11. Wanting to input a PowerPoint presentation that was made at middle school on an IMac. It contains features that prevents my PowerPoint from reading it.
Used my Imac to create a .MOV file. Studio 11 cannot import that format. Added Quicktime 7 to my VISTA. Bought Quicktime Pro. Converted the .MOV to an .AVI.
The AVI quality was pretty crappy; this is true when viewing this AVI in Quicktime, Studio, and Windows Media Player. So I opened a different AVI file created in Studio that is high quality and looks good in Studio and Windows Media Player. The different file looks crappy in Quicktime 7 Pro, so I'm pretty sure the problem is with Quicktime. I cannot find how to adjust the picture quality in Quicktime.
Bonus question: Please tell me an easier way to deal with these compatibility issues. I know just enough about digital movie making to make decent DVD's out of from my digital movie camera.

+The different file looks crappy in Quicktime 7 Pro, so I'm pretty sure the problem is with Quicktime. I cannot find how to adjust the picture quality in Quicktime.+
The following document might be of some help. (iTunes uses QuickTime for video playback, so the same basic troubleshooting measures apply. Some of these can be of help when just the quality of the video is off ... for example, blotchy green, pink, purple colors, washed out video, etc.)
Troubleshooting iTunes for Windows Vista video playback performance issues

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  • NEED THE BEST QUALITY QUICKTIME MOVIE FOR DVD!  THANKS FOR ANY ADVICE.

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  • Quality using Quicktime movies

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  • How do I get the best quality Quicktime movie

    Hi
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    Hi Tom
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  • Output quicktime movie choppy and less sharp than original

    Goodmorning!
    I am planning to make a stand alone movie of my footage that I can keep and watch on my iMac. My sequence was made on FCP 7 on 1920 x 1080 with Prores 422 codec.
    I did a few tests with exporting to quicktime movie (standard settings), because I have read several times that converting this way results in more or less the same quality. When I compare the videoquality of the Quicktime movie with playing the footage on the timeline fullscreen (+view-external video-all frames+), I am very disappointed. Not only is the sharpness of the quicktime movie less than the original, the movie plays very choppy (not fluently at all) .
    My question is: is that result to be expected? May I compare a quicktime movie with the original as described before?
    Or maybe I should export the sequence in a more sophisticated way?
    The quicktime outcome was about 30 seconds and resulted in a file of about 500 MB. My wish is that the size of the file will not be bigger.
    I hope that you can help me. Thanks in advance.

    Tom,
    Three times "correct" to your three questions.
    Opened the exported file in the QuickTime player, Movie Inspector said:
    Structure: Apple ProRess 422 , 1920 x1080 (1888 x 1062) millions, 16-bit integer (little indian) Stereo 48000 khz
    Bps: 25
    Size: 561,7 MB
    Speed: 118,53 Mbit/s
    Current size: 1882 x 1058 pixels
    If I run the sequence through JED deinterlacer, the movie gets a better flow. Of course the sharpness deminish a bit too.
    I hope that you can help me.
    Would export in H.264 be a better option?
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  • Can't use HDV quicktime .mov files (captured in Final Cut Pro) on a mac at work) on my PC at home

    Hiya everyone!
    I've taken some work home from the macs at work, but can't open it on my PC.
    Footage was captured in FCP on a mac at work, HDV quicktime .mov, but won't open in the newest quicktime, windows media player and more importantly in Adobe After Effects CS3 or Premiere Pro CS3 on my PC at home.
    When I try opening the files in quicktime, the screen is white, but the audio plays. They don't open in windows media player at all. When I try to import them into Premiere, I get a message reading, "Error Message, Codec missing or unavailable". But they import into After Effects, except they only play as white...
    I've tried converting them into almost everything, and they often play (as .avi for example in the newest QT, WMP, Adobe Premiere and AE), but they increase A LOT in size and decrease A LOT in quality.
    The HDV files that won't open read as:
    Source: *.mov
    Format: HDV 1080i50, 1920 x 1080, Millions 16-bit Integer (Little Endian), 48.000 kHz
    Movie FPS: 25.00
    Playing FPS: (Available when playing)
    Data Size: 69.53 MB
    Data Rate: 28.10 mbits/sec
    Current time: 00:00:01.64
    Duration: 00:00:20.76
    Normal size: 1920 x 1080
    Current size: 1920 x 1080
    Anything smaller than 1920 x 1080 plays fine.
    I've been all through google, and the adobe and apple sites, and the best I could find is here:
    http://discussions.apple.com/message.jspa?messageID=7753066#7753066
    and
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    My problem is almost identical to these 2...
    No one in the whole world seems to have an answer...
    Does anyone here know how I can use the HDV files from the work macs on my PC at home?
    -Kaiwin

    As a rule of thumb, any CoDec associated with the Apple Pro applications is generally not available on Windows. This also includes their flavor of HDV. The only exception at this point is ProRes, for which they added a player component recently. So therefore this would have to be what you use for capture/ export from FCP. Apart from that you can of course always buy a capture card from Blackmagic or AJA with the benefit of the CoDecs being available cross-platform... Or you use a commercial software-only CoDec like Cineform.
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  • Can't Export from FCE to QuickTime Movie w/o recompression

    I have problems with choosing the correct settings for export of a FCE video clip to QuickTime Movie. I want the best possible quality (without recompression).
    In the manual it says:
    "Exporting a Self-Contained Movie Without Recompressing the Media
    If you choose to export a self-contained movie, you have the option to not recompress the media in your clip or sequence. If you deselect the Recompress All Frames option and choose Current Settings from the Setting pop-up menu, Final Cut Express simply copies frames from existing media files into the new file with no recompression."
    I can't find that option in FCE 4.01 - is it a mistake in the manual? My source media was captured from miniDV tape and the captured media file has the following formate:
    Codec: DV/DVCPRO - NTSC, Linear PCM, Timecode
    Color profile: SD (6-1-6)
    Total bit rate: 29,794
    My exported file has this format:
    Dimensions: 720 x 480
    Codec: Linear PCM, H.264
    Color Profile: SD (6-1-6)
    Audio Channels: 2
    Total bit rate: 2,151
    I have seen this question in the FCE archive and people simply say there is no recompression in FCE Export to QT Movie, but clearly there is since I see the H.264 codec listed in my output file and the bit-rate is a about 1/14th the rate of the original source material. The output file size is also much smaller. What gives. How can I get an unrecompressed file out of FCE so I can send it to a coworker for futher editing with his FCE.

    dsut56 wrote:
    Does anyone else have anything to add to this thread. I'm, sure I'm using Export to QuickTime Movie and not using QuickTime Conversion and from the file specifications I've given above, it is clear that a 14:1 compression took place.
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    Double check:
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    2. Markers: Select whateve you want or don't want.
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    Is this what  you see?
    The export will mirror the Sequence or selected part of the Sequence.
    Al

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