- TMPGENC AUTHORING WORKS 5 OPEN 1080 HD SOFTWARE
- TMPGENC AUTHORING WORKS 5 OPEN 1080 HD TRIAL
- TMPGENC AUTHORING WORKS 5 OPEN 1080 HD FREE
Here are the self-explanatory notes I wrote in the script:ġ) Modify the desDir variable in line 95 to a directory on your system.Ģ) Chapter labels cannot be imported to TMPGEnc Authoring Works. keyframe file that can be imported in TMPGEnc Authoring Works as chapter points. OK, so I hacked this script by Will Liu and ScottW on to export Vegas markers to a. The busier I get, the more attractive this approach gets. Sometimes I do this as well, but lately I'm finding that if I'm careful when I shoot, use the picture profiles on my camera, and just shoot the way I want it to look, I can do a project that is extremely good quality on a final Bluray, and yet use an average laptop and drive and do the project really quickly. Many people thumb their noses at this because they like to add color correction and other niceties to the entire project. This is very good in some cases because it is extremely fast and the quality is exactly the same as the original in the smart-rendered parts. In other words, video with titles, transitions, reframing or added effects are rerendered, but everything else is just recopied exactly as it is but in a new location in a final edit. Smart-rendering is where even after the edit, any frames that are unchanged are just bit copied rather than re-rendered.
What this thread is about is those of us who want to edit then smart-render the footage before writing to Blu-ray. Vegas is an editor and useful to those of us who want to do a little more than copy raw footage to Blu-ray.
TMPGENC AUTHORING WORKS 5 OPEN 1080 HD FREE
A bunch of us use a free HDV capture utility called HDV Split: If all you want to do is put your tapes on Blu-ray, you don't even need Vegas for capturing. > From reading the features it seems that I can bypass Vegas altogether except the capturing of the video. Otherwise, it looks like we have a product that lets you create a BD-R from HDV with no recompression along the way.
TMPGENC AUTHORING WORKS 5 OPEN 1080 HD TRIAL
I would encourage others to experiment with the trial version and let me know if I'm missing something. I'm waiting on delivery of my Pioneer 205 Blu-ray burner to actually burn the disc. However, there is a built-in editor that lets you (easily) insert chapter markers for use in the menus. The only downside is that it does not recognize chapter markers from Vegas. I also did a test with no chapter markers, and no video was displayed for rendering, i.e., no recompression) (It only showed rendering of snippets from the chapter begin points I assume it uses those for menu creation. It creates and uses proxy files, which is interesting.ĭuring the final folder creation NO RECOMPRESSION TOOK PLACE!!! It advises you that during the BD folder structure creation, it will only show clips that need re-rendering. ac3 files into TMPGEnc Authoring and went through its wizard to created a folder structure for a BD-R. When I render them in Vegas I selected "Save as separate elementary streams" in the System tab of the template options. Rendered HDV footage from my Sony HDR-HC7 to "HDV 1080-60i" (no recompression as it had no effects, just different clips strung together) I does what you say it does: builds a BD-R folder structure without recompressing!!!! I downloaded the trial version of TMPGEnc Authoring. That thread is worth a read as it was about me going through the same as you are now. This is something I intend to do when I come around to a mass-produced project where I want more than 2 subtitle tracks. If you're hell bent on authoring in DVDA there is a workaround to get your uncompressed HDV working in it, but you need to buy TMPGEnc Authoring Works first. The 2 disadvantages I've found with it are that it's limited to 2 subtitle tracks, and there is no way I could find to put a "resume" button in the menu.
TMPGENC AUTHORING WORKS 5 OPEN 1080 HD SOFTWARE
The interface can be a little confusing at times, but that goes for other authoring software I've tried. You can drop an HDV file straight into it and it won't recompress. In the meantime you can get the job done using TMPGEnc Authoring Works. It sucks enormously and I wish SCS would fix it. I could never get DVD Architect to accept an HDV file and not recompress it, and I've never heard of anyone else managing this. They play fine on typical Blu-ray players as well as PS3. I've made several of them and sold them to a number of people around the world and I've never had a complaint.