I have the video lab 10 and am thinking of upgrading to the Creator pro but still can't find out if it will let me 'EDIT' AVCHD files or is it just an archival function??
AVCHD EDITING
Started by
xoral
, Nov 17 2009 09:15 AM
3 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 17 November 2009 - 09:15 AM
#2
Posted 17 November 2009 - 01:42 PM
Yes, Creator 2010 will edit AVCHD files. Which camcorder are you using?
Phenom X4 965 3.4Ghz, 4gig DDR3, LG 47" 3D TV, Hitachi 1TB HD, Seagate 500GB, LiteOn iHBS112 Bluray, TSSTCorp SH-222A DVD, ATI HD3300 IGP, VIA HiDef audio with Logitech Z5500 THX certified 5.1 speakers, Epson 4490 scanner, Canon 9000Pro MarkII printer, Sharp AL1551CS laser printer/copier, Sony TRV740 8mm digital, Canon HV20 HDV camcorder and Fuji S7000 for still photos, Win7 Home Premium
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System 2: HP DV7 laptop, Turion II Dual Core 2.4Ghz, 4GB RAM, 640GB hard drive, ATI Mobility HD4650, ATI HiDef Audio, Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit.
Gary Russell
TNUSA
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System 2: HP DV7 laptop, Turion II Dual Core 2.4Ghz, 4GB RAM, 640GB hard drive, ATI Mobility HD4650, ATI HiDef Audio, Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit.
Gary Russell
TNUSA
#3
Posted 18 November 2009 - 06:35 PM
QUOTE (ggrussell @ Nov 17 2009, 01:42 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Yes, Creator 2010 will edit AVCHD files. Which camcorder are you using?
I was considering buying the Canon hf21 or the hfs100 but then I started looking at the D7 DSLR which will store the files in the MOV 264 file codec. Either way it would most likely be a Canon product. Thanks for your reply. Right now I have the Video lab 10 and also have the Cyberlink Director 8 trial and am waffling between the two. I had really bad results from the Pinnacle product ( studio 14 ) it output video mpeg files with a lot of staircasing that wasn't there on my camera output or on the same processing through either Roxio or Cyberlink or even my old Premiere Elements 2. So the only question is a matter of features and user interface preferences. Right now it looks as if the Roxio is the one that I feel most comfortable with. The pinnacle one was full of things that didn't work. Windows that would have a bunch of choices that would not function, rendering breakdowns on simple shorts, and as mentioned the bad quallity. It, of course is loaded with extras but they are no good if the quality is not up to par. Thanks once again for the reply it wasn't that clear in the documented descriptions it only refers to the ability to store the files directly to hard drive or to burn them directly to disc.
#4
Posted 18 November 2009 - 07:19 PM
I have a sample file from the Canon MK5 DSLR 1080p .MOV file. I have no problems importing it into Videowave and adding transitions, etc.
Edited by ggrussell, 18 November 2009 - 07:20 PM.
Phenom X4 965 3.4Ghz, 4gig DDR3, LG 47" 3D TV, Hitachi 1TB HD, Seagate 500GB, LiteOn iHBS112 Bluray, TSSTCorp SH-222A DVD, ATI HD3300 IGP, VIA HiDef audio with Logitech Z5500 THX certified 5.1 speakers, Epson 4490 scanner, Canon 9000Pro MarkII printer, Sharp AL1551CS laser printer/copier, Sony TRV740 8mm digital, Canon HV20 HDV camcorder and Fuji S7000 for still photos, Win7 Home Premium
---------
System 2: HP DV7 laptop, Turion II Dual Core 2.4Ghz, 4GB RAM, 640GB hard drive, ATI Mobility HD4650, ATI HiDef Audio, Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit.
Gary Russell
TNUSA
---------
System 2: HP DV7 laptop, Turion II Dual Core 2.4Ghz, 4GB RAM, 640GB hard drive, ATI Mobility HD4650, ATI HiDef Audio, Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit.
Gary Russell
TNUSA
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