|
Posted by doc on 09/06/05 21:48
they do offer the trial as you suggested and downloading it and trying it
out i was able to load in both my studio 8 and studio 9 files (after viewing
some of the tutorials. thank goodness for both the tutorials and the fact
that LE "racks" in my former work. i had some commercials and other footage
that i desperately didn't want to loose. thanks soooooo much.
doc
"TonyP" <arpierre@hooptonline.net> wrote in message
news:4fhTe.29373$YC1.14385@fe08.lga...
> doc wrote:
>
>> hi Specs, following this thread and hope u don't mind my jumping in here.
>> we have about 90hrs of HDV 1080i 24p full size dv tapes that represent a
>> complete 87 segment feature length movie and are ready to do the editing
>> and production and trying to figure the best approach to keep our project
>> as near to the 35mm film look (thus the 24p) and want to spec out the
>> edit hardware/software.
>
> I have not worked in HDV, so can't speak on it. You can go to the LE
> forums where there are people that have ACTUALLY used it. The system
> requirements are high, very high.
> http://tinyurl.com/8wct9 and search for HDV (or similiar topic) and see
> what comes up. Also, this link will explain what Edition can do within the
> HDV format and what the system requirements are. It is a .pdf (Adobe
> Acrobat) file http://tinyurl.com/dk3vn
>
> You can read through the forums and see what types of issues also come up
> in editing within Liquid. Again, no product is perfect. For me, Liquid has
> worked fine. The learning curve is high initially (Pinnacle provides
> online video tutorials, and there are DVD's you can buy to get you up and
> running in a couple of days), but once you get the hang of it, the
> interface is far more customizable and the workflow in most instances
> quicker (as compared to when I was using Premiere 6.5).
> Call Pinnacle/Avid and see if they still offer the free trial DVD.
>
[Back to original message]
|