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Title: Convertor
Description: Need some assistance


Nags - May 27, 2007 03:37 PM (GMT)
Hey guys, after the spring update ive been looking for a means to convert my video from DVR-MS to one of the compatible formats for my computer to stream, does anyone have any suggestions on this? I have tried a lot of programs and they have all been unsuccessful. Any help will be much appreciated.

BrotherEstapol - May 28, 2007 10:01 AM (GMT)
I'd suggest getting alot of a professional video eidting program like Ulead Media Studio or Adobe Premiere.
If you can watch the video on your PC, those programs should be able to read them, and thus convert them into another format of your choice.

I've also moved this to the PC forum. ;)

sarunas007 - July 24, 2007 06:17 PM (GMT)
Definetly recomend Adobe Premiere, although there are many tools to do this;

I use premiere pro 2.0... Simple but yet effective

Features Include:

* Multicam editing—Edit multiple-camera shoots quickly and easily. View multiple video tracks from a multicam shoot, and edit by switching between tracks in real time. Easily sync clips based on source timecode.
* Accelerated client review and approval—Expedite reviews with Adobe Clip Notes. Embed video into a PDF file, e-mail the file to your client to review with timecode-specific comments, and then view comments mapped to the timeline.
* DVD authoring from the timeline—Create high-quality, menu-driven DVDs directly from the Adobe Premiere Pro timeline. Make full-resolution, interactive DVDs for digital dailies, test discs, or final delivery.
* Native HDV editing—Capture and edit HDV content in its original format with no conversion or quality loss. Adobe Premiere Pro 2.0 works with popular HDV-format cameras and VTRs.
* Native SD and HD support—Capture, edit, and deliver full-resolution SD or HD using native support for the Xena HS real-time encoding card from AJA Video.
* Enhanced colour correction tools—Take advantage of new colour correction tools, each optimised for specific tasks. Fast colour correction allows for quick and easy adjustments, while secondary color-correction tools allow you to make more selective modifications for a professional finish.
* 10-bit and 16-bit colour resolution support—Maintain source integrity with support for 10-bit video and 16-bit PSD files.
* 32-bit internal colour processing—Maintain maximum image quality with subtle and dramatic changes to colour, contrast, and exposure, free of the banding and artefact caused by lower bit-depth processing.
* GPU-accelerated rendering—Adobe Premiere Pro 2.0 automatically adjusts to take full advantage of the power of your graphics card, accelerating the preview and rendering of motion, opacity, colour, and image distortion effects.
* Adobe Bridge—Browse, organise, and preview content files, and then drag and drop what you need from Adobe Bridge. Search by or edit XMP metadata such as keywords, language, and format.


Minimum System Requirements:

Windows XP

* Microsoft Windows XP
* Intel Pentium III 800Mhz processor (Pentium 4 3GHz recommended)
* 256MB of RAM (1GB or more recommended)
* 800MB of available hard-disk space for installation
* Microsoft DirectX-compatible sound card (multi channel ASIO-compatible sound card for surround sound support recommended)
* CD-ROM drive, CD recorder (CD-R/-RW) required for CD creation
* DVD recorder (DVD-R/RW+R/RW) required for export to DVD
* 1,280x1,024 32-bit colour video display adapter (OpenGL card recommended)
* For DV: OHCI-compatible IEEE 1394 interface and dedicated 7200rpm UDMA 66 IDE or SCSI hard disk
* For third-party capture cards: Adobe Premiere Pro certified capture card
* Internet or phone connection required for product activation.

Qubert - July 25, 2007 06:19 AM (GMT)
I barely ever do any video editing. I don't know of any video editing program other than imovie for my mac. Any recommendations for a basic windows video editor?

f15active - July 25, 2007 07:40 AM (GMT)
I use Sony Vegas 6.0 for my video making with fraps. Its a pretty good program, I sometimes use it to convert .wav to mp3 although I have wavepad for that as an alternative. I also use it to delete the video component from a movie so I just have audio, and if it is a youtube video I use audacity to record the audio from that which works well.

thebigm - July 25, 2007 09:11 AM (GMT)
http://www.download.com/DVRMSToolbox/3000-...4-10444368.html That seems to get it to mpeg file and from there you can use VirtualDubMod to convert it.

Robert - July 25, 2007 09:33 AM (GMT)
QUOTE (f15active @ Jul 25 2007, 05:40 PM)
I use Sony Vegas 6.0 for my video making with fraps. Its a pretty good program, I sometimes use it to convert .wav to mp3 although I have wavepad for that as an alternative. I also use it to delete the video component from a movie so I just have audio, and if it is a youtube video I use audacity to record the audio from that which works well.

Doesn't Sony Vegas cost a lot of money? Or did you get it another way? :ph43r:




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