Movie Maker - WMV - DVD
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essaniael
Newbie
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31. August 2006 @ 01:50 |
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Using Windows Movie Maker to capture from miniDV, I notice that the quality is not as high as the original tape, and also that the quality suffers again when I convert the WMV file (created by Movie Maker) to a DVD using DVDSanta or Winavi.
Is there better capture software than Windows Movie Maker? Is there better translation software from WMV to DVD? Is it better to capture to an AVI format than WMV?
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whassup
Member
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31. August 2006 @ 14:56 |
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This is a duplicate post that is also found in the DVD Video Authoring forum. Check there. I answered your question.
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Senior Member
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31. August 2006 @ 22:50 |
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essaniael
Newbie
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1. September 2006 @ 05:53 |
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Ahhh! I see the light!
Thanks so much for this. It is the answer I was seeking.
BAD WMV! "The wmv format is a heavily compressed format. By using it, you are already losing quality right in the start of the process."
I am presently looking to use Ulead Videostudio. I understand that this software can capture and output to AVI.
Am I, though, losing a good deal of quality by using a USB cable instead of firewire, even if I save the DV transfer in AVI format? The problem I have is that I have no firewire port on my motherboard and no spare PCI slots to add one. :/
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essaniael
Newbie
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1. September 2006 @ 06:45 |
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In the Movie Maker advice given at:
http://www.digitalvideoclub.com/tutorials/moviemakermistakes.php
It is stated that the second option: Digital Device format DV-AVI should be selected to avoid creating a WMV file. However, this option is greyed out for me and so I cannot select it in Movie Maker.
Is this because I am using a USB connection for capturing DV? Will I have the same problem with Ulead Videostudio?
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Senior Member
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1. September 2006 @ 10:49 |
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Correct. If you use USB you cannot capture in DV-AVI with Moviemaker. This is not very usefull anyway. If you use USB you are capturing in relative low quality and it's quite useless to blow it up in a high quality codec. If you realy want to capture in high quality, you should use Firewire.
If your camcorder connected through USB is recognized by a capturing program is a matter of trying. That you managed to capture with Moviemaker shows means that it apparently is succesful in recognizing the driver that you must have installed. Other programs may as well, but there is no guarantee.
Check this:
http://www.digitalvideoclub.com/basics/transfer.php
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essaniael
Newbie
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1. September 2006 @ 15:00 |
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Thank you, you have been very helpful. I shall have to sacrifice one of my PCI cards and get an IEEE/firewire card immediately.
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Member
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1. September 2006 @ 21:38 |
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You should - it's definitely worth it!
Wyman
Custom built PC - WinXP MCE - P4 3.2ghz(overclocked) - 2gb of PC3200 ram - Maxtor 250gb - Sony DRU-800A - Sony DW-D22A DVD+/-RW - Clone DVD2 - DVD Fab Decrypter - Nero 7 - Epson R320 Stylus Photo Printer - Gigabyte mobo(model 8IPE1000P-G) - Hauppage WinTV PVR-150MCE tv tuner - ATI AIW 9600XT vid card
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essaniael
Newbie
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2. September 2006 @ 00:45 |
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Ok, I now have a firewire port and cable, and DV->AVI is working a treat, good quality.
I was just wondering if all DV capturing software is the same in its capturing functionality/quality and therefore whether I should bother looking at any other DV capturing software, since Movie Maker works ok?
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Senior Member
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2. September 2006 @ 01:02 |
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Yep, as stated in one of my posts earlier in this thread, it does not matter which software you use if you capture DV-AVI through Firewire. Actually, capturing is not a very appropriate word for this proces; transfer is better. The thing is that this proces is a real tranfer of digital data, just like copying digital data from one place on your hard drive to another.
So, Moviemaker is as good as any other solution to do this. By the way, there are a couple of nice freeware utilities that you can also use. You will find a couple on http://www.digitalvideoclub.com/downloads/freedownloads.php
Personally I like WinDV very much. The nice thing is that it does not take any system resources and you can keep doing other things on your computer (within limits) while transferring video without much risk of dropping frames.
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essaniael
Newbie
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2. September 2006 @ 03:03 |
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Thanks again, friend.
I have been playing around with WinDV and the AV 2 setting produces 5 large, grey, flashing blocks (like huge pixels) on the AVI output file, for some reason. Is this known about?
AV 1 is fine, but I understand that AV 2 is better quality. Is that correct?
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Senior Member
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2. September 2006 @ 04:09 |
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I have never experienced nor heard of the phenomenon that you describe, so I don't know what is going on.
But no, type-2 is not better quality than type-1, so if type-1 works OK for you, just stick to that.
Again a usefull reference to understand:
http://www.digitalvideoclub.com/techinfo/avi.php
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dildoman
Newbie
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10. September 2006 @ 00:02 |
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Hi I have been using wmm for some time and find it to to be ok,I would like to know what is the best way of storing dvds to your harddrive? I convert my mini dv home movies to AVI files via wmm,and burn to disc via Nero, now I want to keep backups on my hard drive in a compressed form if possible, that is safe and losses no quality, is that possible, our should I keep them in AVI files for best quality.
thanks for your help.
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Senior Member
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10. September 2006 @ 23:37 |
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Of course you acn just store the content of the DVD itself on the hard drive. If that takes to much space and you think of compressing: you can save the movie as an MPEG with lower bitrate or convert to other formats (like DivX or so), but the quality will go down. Far the best option to archive your movies after editing (apart form storing on hard drive) is to record it back to tape. Just save the edited movie as DV-AVI and then put it back to tape.
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dildoman
Newbie
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12. September 2006 @ 03:11 |
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Thanks for your reply, have you heard of rat-dvd? its ment to store up to 3 dvds in good quality, but can u burn them back with the same quality?
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dengfeng
Suspended permanently
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12. September 2006 @ 18:15 |
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you can convert it back with the Pocket DVD Ripper
which convert DVD to WMV/WMA/MP3
you can google the software
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