Bear with me and allow me to explain in detail. I did a favor for a friend of a friend and taped an “event,” I’m not an “event videographer.” The following is the very reason I refuse to do “event” work.
I was approached by a friend to video tape the memorial service of his friend’s deceased son. No problem. When I made the 10 DVDs (to be sent out to family and friends) they played perfectly on my DVD player (a Pioneer). It played fine on the client’s until it reached a certain point. Then the picture would pixelate and break up. Several of you here told me to lower the bit rate. I did. That seemed to work—on her DVD player—no loss of image quality. I’m happy. She’s happy.
Now that she has given the DVDs out to family and friends, she’s getting reports that the DVDs are bad. Same issues, different players and computers with DVD drives. You can see what’s coming, right? I lowered the bit rate again (down to 6,000 now) and reburned them all.
She says, I go to the store and by a DVD and it works in everyone’s player. I rent DVDs from Blockbuster and they work in everyone’s player. I’ve tried, on a number of occasions, to explain the dilemma of the many issues with “consumer level” DVDs. I explained that with time, the problem (hopefully) will go away once the compatibility issues are resolved (many from outdated DVD players/software).
Over the course of two months or more, in an effort to satisfy the client, I have burned and reburned more than 50 DVDs (to get just 10, all of which have worked perfectly in my player). Just a few minutes ago, I hung up from a phone conversation with her explaining once more the issues we are dealing with. All she knows is 1) her son is dead, 2) some of the DVDs work, some don’t, 3) she’s an unhappy camper. Today I got the distinct impression she thinks I’ve simply been feeding her a line about the compatibility issues.
Any suggestions any of you might have as to how I can convince her I’m not trying to con her would be greatly appreciated.
I was approached by a friend to video tape the memorial service of his friend’s deceased son. No problem. When I made the 10 DVDs (to be sent out to family and friends) they played perfectly on my DVD player (a Pioneer). It played fine on the client’s until it reached a certain point. Then the picture would pixelate and break up. Several of you here told me to lower the bit rate. I did. That seemed to work—on her DVD player—no loss of image quality. I’m happy. She’s happy.
Now that she has given the DVDs out to family and friends, she’s getting reports that the DVDs are bad. Same issues, different players and computers with DVD drives. You can see what’s coming, right? I lowered the bit rate again (down to 6,000 now) and reburned them all.
She says, I go to the store and by a DVD and it works in everyone’s player. I rent DVDs from Blockbuster and they work in everyone’s player. I’ve tried, on a number of occasions, to explain the dilemma of the many issues with “consumer level” DVDs. I explained that with time, the problem (hopefully) will go away once the compatibility issues are resolved (many from outdated DVD players/software).
Over the course of two months or more, in an effort to satisfy the client, I have burned and reburned more than 50 DVDs (to get just 10, all of which have worked perfectly in my player). Just a few minutes ago, I hung up from a phone conversation with her explaining once more the issues we are dealing with. All she knows is 1) her son is dead, 2) some of the DVDs work, some don’t, 3) she’s an unhappy camper. Today I got the distinct impression she thinks I’ve simply been feeding her a line about the compatibility issues.
Any suggestions any of you might have as to how I can convince her I’m not trying to con her would be greatly appreciated.