Can you buy DVD Architect by itself and add it on to Vegas 4.0? I already have Vegas and want to know if I can do that. If not, can someone please tell me if there is software out there that will let me burn my Vegas projects to DVD?
Thanks for your help in advance - kind of a newbie here!
Unfortunately DVD-A is bunded with Vegas so you can't buy DVD-A alone in spite of the fact DVD-A and Vegas are two seperate applications. So while there is a single version of Vegas, there is no single version of DVD Architect, you need to buy the Vegas/DVD Architect verson or upgrade to it.
Vegas makes compliant MPEG-2 files suitable for putting on a DVD. Therefore you can use ANY DVD Authoring program. A DVD Authoring program is what adds bells and whistles to the DVD menu on top of making the necessary image and overhead files.
You can use other applications to process the MPEG-2 files Vegas makes. Like Nero or Ulead's DVD Movie Factory.
So to simplify things (for me!) I should just edit my project in Vegas, then what is the process - render it as a MPEG-2 file, then use Nero or Ulead to put it on to a DVD?
That will work. Use the DV NTSC template (or PAL if you're in Pal land) and render as a MPEG-2.
Any DVD Authoring applicaion should be able to open it and finish for you. The one issue is if or not there will be a quality issue IF the applcation recompresses the video stream or not. Personally I think some make too big an issue of it. If you start with good quality digital source and use the included encoders and don't mess with the bitrate settings you shouldn't notice any quality loss unless you're one of those guys that sits six inches from the TV screen and "sees" things.
cool, thanks for all your help here - i really appreciate it.
I'm just shooting/editing a simple 15 minute film for company xmas party, shot on a prosumer DV camera. I noticed that I don't have the option to render as mpeg-2 in my vegas set-up. Am i ok just using mpeg-1 and copying it to DVD and showing it on my laptop with projector and good speakers? I'm assuming that mpeg-1 is probably fine for this?
Try a search in the Vegas forum for projector. I've seen several threads on what people have done. I haven't really followed that much so can't give specifics. I would guess if you're going to project on a screen on just a blank wall you may want to compensate a little by dropping down the brightness and increasing the contrast a little.
If you're starting with a MPEG-1, which is rather low bitrate its going to look rather soft. If the typical Xmas party I doubt anyone with notice.
even a schlocky program like MyDVD can make a decent disk with a Main COncept file. Never tried it myself but did see a disk made that way. Guy has Premiere 6.5 which apparently comes with main concept and he's used MyDVD for some time.