Create Video CD with iMac?greenspun.com : LUSENET : Video CD : One Thread |
I want to create my own Video CD with my iMac (DV) it connect with my camcorder using fireware 1394. Acturally I can capture the video using iMoive it come with my Mac. So, what it the next step I should do to create VCD?Any software and harware needed? What is the setting to do with?
Please help!
-- Kennedy Yiu (kennedyyiu@hongkong.com), June 07, 2000
I am also looking how to do it. Maybee you should have a look to the Adaptec home page (Toast Pro and more). If you search for "video" you will get a list with some interessting tools. (i.e. VideoCD)...Let me now if you have other solutions for this issue. By the way - I created a Video/Audio Mpeg stream with QuickTime. Do you work with an other tool?
-- Marcel Witmer (marcel@xsystem.ch), June 14, 2000.
I still looking for best way to create VCD on my iMac. Anyalsoe can you show me the way to create Video/Audio Mpeg stearm on iMac please help!
-- Kennedy Yiu (Kennedyyiu@hongkong.com), June 14, 2000.
Get Heuris's Power Professional MPEG ($500) to convert your Quicktime movie into an "Adaptec acceptable" form. Then "write" the file onto a writable-CD using Adaptec Toast 4. You can get the MPEG Power Professional at www.terran.com. Note that Heuris's $99 MPEG Exporter will NOT let you make a VCD. Only the Power Professional will will make it "Adaptec acceptable".-- John (john7363@hotmail.com), June 16, 2000.
-- John (john7363@hotmail.com), June 16, 2000.
To me, 500 bucks seems like WAY too much money to create VCD MPEG-1s on a Mac!!! You can buy a dedicated VCD recorder for about that much money.I tried Query's software (demo) and it seemed kind of flakey and unpolished (I never got it working).
I have never seen a slick, easy program to do this on the Mac. Hopefully something will be announced at Macworld Jan 2000 in a week or two.
Can the standard Heuris MPG work on a PC??
-- Doug (DougG5@aol.com), December 26, 2000.
Creating a Video CD on a Mac is painless, although I had a few missteps early on. I tried several CD's which recorded, but did not play on my Sony DVD Player. ( The player couldn't find the CD)If you use a CD-RW disk you won't have any problems. They have a darker film inside which the DVD players can't see through, unlike a CD which seems "clear" to a DVD player. The Sony DVD can't read a homemade Audio CD either, unless it's burnt on a CD-RW.
I use Roxio(Formerly Adaptec) Toast Titanium 5.0 which works very easily. It was worth the $89 bucks for the program. I use a Que drive 12x burner, and the current media I use has a 4x burn speed.
I movie 2.0 easily accepts my firewire DV camcorder, and I can import jpeg still images into the program.
If anything, the Video CD does have some quality limitations and you can notice a pixelization during fast movements. Hope th
-- Roger De Muth (rdemuth@syr.edu), April 18, 2001.