another one

ultraman wrote on 12/18/2001, 9:58 AM
Here's my second one.

If the answer is yes to my previous posting, is vv3 work fine for one hour long project and last but not least, is the audio and video stay PERFECTLY and ALWAYS in sync?

This issue has been the source of many bad nights for me trying to guess randomly the number of frame to drag the audio track to make it in sync etc...

Comments

Zoogie wrote on 12/18/2001, 10:16 AM
I was in the same dilema, I figured I would go with vv3
for less and later get a dual cpu to speed up the rendering at the end. ( I've read from other posts though that vv3 doesnt use the dual cpus very efficiently.)
cheers
Myxo
fosko wrote on 12/18/2001, 11:00 AM
You know, Ultra
You would get a LOT better response to your posts if you put a subject in the subject line instead of miniature phrases no one knows what it means. It's kind of annoying and we can't read your mind. Plus it really makes it easier for all of us to scan the topics
SonyEPM wrote on 12/19/2001, 8:36 AM
We've printed hour-long DV programs back to DV tape, from both Vidcap and the Vegas timeline, so absolutely it can be done.