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 Posted by Tim Streater on 10/07/52 11:51 
In article <4gfsoiF1nco23U1@individual.net>, 
 "PTravel" <ptravel@ruyitang.com> wrote: 
 
[...] 
 
> Video isn't rendered to DVD.  The process should be this: 
>  
> 1.  D-25 video is captured bit-for-bit to a DV-codec-encoded AVI. 
> 2.  The video is edited, i.e. transitions, titles, effects and corrections  
> are added. 
> 3.  The edited material (anything other than simple cuts) is rendered, i.e.  
> the software creates new frames that incorporate the title, effect,  
> transition, etc. 
> 4.  The resulting finished video is transcoded to mpeg2.  Transcoding is the  
> actual translation of the D-25 video to mpeg2, which is required by DVD. 
> 5   The DVD is authored, i.e. menus are added and the mpeg2 is sliced into  
> DVD-compliant VOB files.  The video isn't altered, but merely repackaged to  
> comply with the DVD spec. 
> 6.  The DVD is burned. 
>  
> Some software, mostly entry level, will do all six steps. 
>  
> From the standpoint of video quality, step 4, transcoding, is the most  
> critical.  Mpeg2 is a lossy, temporally-compressed format, i.e. data gets  
> thrown away by this step.  Which data and how much of it gets tossed is  
> determined by the transcoding software.  The transcoder has a lot of  
> decisions to make about how to compress the video.  As a rule, the most  
> optimal compression takes the longest time.  Accordingly, entry-level  
> packages usually introduce signficant compromises so that transcoding  
> doesn't take too long. 
>  
> > That is, if I bought Final Cut, and used it instead of iMovie, 
> > do I just get a lot more editing capability, or do I get a better visual 
> > result on the DVD (starting from the same camera-video, that is) as well? 
>  
> If you're getting poor quality video, it's not because of the editing  
> program (Final Cut Pro is an editing package), but because of the  
> transcoding.  As I said, I don't know Mac, so I can't make any  
> recommendations.  On my PC, I edit in Adobe Premiere Pro, a prosumer-level  
> editor comparable to FCP.  Though Premiere can burn DVDs from the timeline,  
> I only use it for editing.  Once my project is finished, I save it as AVI  
> (or frame serve, but that's another discussion altogether) and then use a  
> program called tmpgenc, which is a dedicated standalone transcoder.  To give  
> you an idea of what I meant about compromise, transcoding a 2-hour video  
> with tmpgence tweaked to its most optimal settings for video quality can  
> take up to 20 hours on my 3.2 Ghz P4 with 1 gig of RAM.  Once the video has  
> been transcoded to mpeg2, I author in Adobe Encore and burn with Nero.  The  
> DVDs that I produce approach commercial DVDs in technical (if not artistic)  
> video quality. 
 
That's very helpful. Part of my ignorance was which step took place  
where. That's clear now and much appreciated. 
 
-- tim
 
  
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