i record gameplay off my PS3 with a hauppauge PVR. the filetype is M2TS. i have sony vegas movie studio 9 and it cant open/edit the files. would vegas pro 9 be able to edit them?
It works, just remember to use the AC-3 audio codec, for some reason the AAC that the Haupphauge HD PVR produces is not recognized by Vegas, if I recall it's not even recognized by VLC and Quicktime, leading me to believe that the AAC codec used by Haupphauge is not exactly up to spec.
Tried this today on my PC and it works well m2ts files go back on the TL and will smart render,then when placed in DVD-A in blue ray mode,there is no re-rendering there either
I'm surprised that Vegas Pro 9.0 (I'm using the new 9.0c) works for some of you on m2ts files. I can import them into a new project but the program dies on me after that. I also tried demuxing into the video (.mpv) part and the audio part (.mpa - AC-3). Any suggestions as to why it doesn't work for me?
Some background: The .m2ts files came from some travel films I shot with a Sony HD camcorder last year. I had created an HD DVD movie at that time, but when HD DVD died I converted the .EVO files into .m2ts files using EVOdemux and tsMuxerGUI. I decided recently that I want to make a real Blu-ray film from these and so I was going to play around with them in Vegas Pro and then subsequently use DVD Architect to author a blu-ray disk.
By the way, since my way of getting the m2ts files doesn't work in Vegas Pro, does anybody know of a way to convert .EVO files to a format Vegas Pro will understand? At the moment I could convert my m2ts files into mt4 files using Nero which Vegas Pro can handle but I don't want to have to convert formats more than once.
P.S. I forgot to say that I am using the 32-bit version of Vegas Pro under Windows XP.
I discovered why my m2ts files caused problems. They had stereo audio. When I demuxed them, converted the audio to AC-3 with Vegas Pro, and remuxed, then everything seemed fine. I got the audio from an older Sony HD camcorder in 2007 and had converted the .EVO files from the HD DVD disks that I had produced initially to m2ts using some EVO converter software.