OZONE Asylum
Forums
Multimedia/Animation
Codecs and Premiere 6
This page's ID:
11381
Search
QuickChanges
Forums
FAQ
Archives
Register
Edit Post
Who can edit a post?
The poster and administrators may edit a post. The poster can only edit it for a short while after the initial post.
Your User Name:
Your Password:
Login Options:
Remember Me On This Computer
Your Text:
Insert Slimies »
Insert UBB Code »
Close
Last Tag
|
All Tags
UBB Help
Hey dude. Not sure if I have installed WinMedia9 codecs, there are ALL sorts of codecs on this damn computer. LOL @ standing away from the computer while rendering, Im like that as well. I think its got something to do with rendering be asceptible to jinxes or magnetic energy (I swear I emanate ALOT of that stuff and thats why things bugger up on me! ;) ) Thank God this only happens now and again, rendering has its days I guess. I think Premiere CAN be an unstable piece of crap, but as my IT teacher once said, "Its not the computer, its the user" ;) ATM, Im actually recompressing (this will take a while for me to explain) the footage I previously did. To make things easier Ill do it in point form. 1. Original .avi's are compressed to Widescreen PAL 29frames using DivX 5.02. When recently played back there is slow playback and out of sync audio. This being to MUCH frustration. 2. These compressed files are then imported into Premiere AGAIN. The overall performance, as stated at start of topic, is REALLY slow playback and editing performance. 3. These .avi's are being compressed using DivX ;-) MPEG4 Fast Motion and overall result is spot on at the moment. Plus performance in Premiere is fine as well. The specs of the my comp Im doing this one, as you asked, are Win Media Player 8 in WinXP Pro. I had the bad results and the good results all in this player so I think its all to do with codec and footage. DivX Player 2.0 Alpha plays my latest files ok except sound is lacking. So Im just sticking with Media Player. Bloody technical shit, some things are SO fickle. "You don't know how paralysing that is, that stare of a blank canvas, which says to the painter: you can't do a thing." - Vincent Van Gogh
Loading...
Options:
Enable Slimies
Enable Linkwords
« Backwards
—
Onwards »