Not in my opinion. Not even close. I've made lots of DVD's using other products like Ulead's DVD Movie Factory. Before that I've burned hundreds of VCD's, I'm aware of all the steps involved. The process in DVD Movie Factory is simple, quick and the results good. I ordered DVD Architect, thinking I would be getting a superior product. Boy have I been disappointed! The steps in DVDA are clumsy, not well documented and as you'll discover, misleading, resulting in much effort and time being wasted.
To begin with the interface is clumsy, klutzy even. Worse the released version is buggy, riddled with mickey mouse errors that should have been caught by beta testers and weren't.
Doing simple tasks in painfully clumsy. And not well explained in the manual. Like setting up a series of thumbnails for Chapter Points. A nice feature, the Insert Scene Selection Menu is glossed over and no illustrations are provided leaving users to guess and fiddle.
Navigation button actions are improperly programmed resulting in videos played off a DVD set top player returning to the main menu instead of to the sub menu they originated from. Yet the built-in preview works correctly. Again, this is simple carelessness meaning NO or POOR testing and hints at a product rushed out the door leaving end users to suffer and come up with klutge fixes.
Most annoying to me is I spend hours yesterday tweaking my first project to be burned in DVDA. Late last night I was ready to burn to DVD and so I clicked on the Make DVD button. I get a bunch of nitpicking error messages that are informational, so I click the Optimize button and I'm shocked to see a sea of yellow warning meassages indicating all kinds of problems.
Where where any warning messages when I was building the project?
Why does DVDA accept a MPEG-2 video/audio file and allow you to go through all the bother of setting up a main and sub menu pages, add background music and all the rest, the after you spends hours doing that say, sorry, I'll need to recompress?
You just wasted a bunch of my time.
Now a couple in the forum said, well just re render the audio in Vegas. I grumble, try one file as and render as a AC-3 file. OK, now what?
I spent another half hour thumbing through the DVDA manual, the online help, reading forum posts.HOW to you replace the MPEG-2 audio stream with a AC-3 file?
If you can, and I'm not sure you can, the how-to is hidden. The Optimize page in DVDA does NOTHING except tell you there's a problem. There is no way to replace a file with another.
So now what?
I could just let DVDA recompress and optimize, and hours, days? later I may have a DVD. But what quality?
This is Micky Mouse!
To begin with the interface is clumsy, klutzy even. Worse the released version is buggy, riddled with mickey mouse errors that should have been caught by beta testers and weren't.
Doing simple tasks in painfully clumsy. And not well explained in the manual. Like setting up a series of thumbnails for Chapter Points. A nice feature, the Insert Scene Selection Menu is glossed over and no illustrations are provided leaving users to guess and fiddle.
Navigation button actions are improperly programmed resulting in videos played off a DVD set top player returning to the main menu instead of to the sub menu they originated from. Yet the built-in preview works correctly. Again, this is simple carelessness meaning NO or POOR testing and hints at a product rushed out the door leaving end users to suffer and come up with klutge fixes.
Most annoying to me is I spend hours yesterday tweaking my first project to be burned in DVDA. Late last night I was ready to burn to DVD and so I clicked on the Make DVD button. I get a bunch of nitpicking error messages that are informational, so I click the Optimize button and I'm shocked to see a sea of yellow warning meassages indicating all kinds of problems.
Where where any warning messages when I was building the project?
Why does DVDA accept a MPEG-2 video/audio file and allow you to go through all the bother of setting up a main and sub menu pages, add background music and all the rest, the after you spends hours doing that say, sorry, I'll need to recompress?
You just wasted a bunch of my time.
Now a couple in the forum said, well just re render the audio in Vegas. I grumble, try one file as and render as a AC-3 file. OK, now what?
I spent another half hour thumbing through the DVDA manual, the online help, reading forum posts.HOW to you replace the MPEG-2 audio stream with a AC-3 file?
If you can, and I'm not sure you can, the how-to is hidden. The Optimize page in DVDA does NOTHING except tell you there's a problem. There is no way to replace a file with another.
So now what?
I could just let DVDA recompress and optimize, and hours, days? later I may have a DVD. But what quality?
This is Micky Mouse!