Though I am relatively satisfied using my Premiere/DVStorm combination for editing, I am not satisfied with the SoftEncoder MPEG2 encoding option with that system for DVD production, particularly for long form work where lower average bitrates are needed. I also don't have a decent authoring program nor any method of encoding audio to AC-3, as is utterly necessary for release-quality DVDs that run in excess of about 80 minutes.
So even though I wasn't really looking for another NLE, the glowing reviews for Vegas 3 and the already stupendous early reviews for Vegas 4, combined with the fact that there is an attractive introductory price through 3/15 for the "Vegas 4 +DVD Architect" package that will give me the all important AC-3 encoding, MPEG2 encoding, and DVD authoring all in one bundle, makes it hard to look past.
Before Vegas 4, however, I had set my sights on Canopus Procoder for MPEG2 encoding since in trials I conducted last summer between a demo version of it, TMPEG, and SoftEncoder, I found it WAY ahead of the other two in video quality for hard-to-encode passages. But it's a $700 piece of software and STILL doesn't offer AC-3. And of course it's not an authoring program so I'd sill need that elsewhere.
Other than Vegas, to get authoring with AC-3 means either $1000 on ReelDVD or $600 on DVDitPE, the latter of which seems especially overpriced as my understanding is it's just the dinky DVDit program with AC encoding tacked on. So I'd be looking at between $1,300 and $1,700 for either of the Procoder/Sonic authoring combos versus Vegas 4 +DVDA at $600 retail through March 15. For less than half of the cheapest alternative combo, I get not just STEREO AC-3, but 5.1 Dolby, true 5.1 mixing in an NLE, ASIO driver support so I can use my high-end Delta 1010 card and converters for video editing as well as for Cubase VST 32 audio recording, decent DVD authoring, AND MPEG2 encoding, all on top of one of the most touted NLEs available on any platform.
Seems like a no brainer. The only thing holding me up is I'm wondering how the MPEG2 encoding with Vegas 4 compares to the stellar encoding of Procoder? Has anyone done side-by-side comparisons? Or can anyone offer any comparison of the two under the hood that would help me decide whether there will/should be a substantial difference in quality achievable at the same data rates? Does the MPEG2 encoding under Vegas even allow, for example, 2-pass encoding and variable bit rates?
Thanks in advance for any input.
So even though I wasn't really looking for another NLE, the glowing reviews for Vegas 3 and the already stupendous early reviews for Vegas 4, combined with the fact that there is an attractive introductory price through 3/15 for the "Vegas 4 +DVD Architect" package that will give me the all important AC-3 encoding, MPEG2 encoding, and DVD authoring all in one bundle, makes it hard to look past.
Before Vegas 4, however, I had set my sights on Canopus Procoder for MPEG2 encoding since in trials I conducted last summer between a demo version of it, TMPEG, and SoftEncoder, I found it WAY ahead of the other two in video quality for hard-to-encode passages. But it's a $700 piece of software and STILL doesn't offer AC-3. And of course it's not an authoring program so I'd sill need that elsewhere.
Other than Vegas, to get authoring with AC-3 means either $1000 on ReelDVD or $600 on DVDitPE, the latter of which seems especially overpriced as my understanding is it's just the dinky DVDit program with AC encoding tacked on. So I'd be looking at between $1,300 and $1,700 for either of the Procoder/Sonic authoring combos versus Vegas 4 +DVDA at $600 retail through March 15. For less than half of the cheapest alternative combo, I get not just STEREO AC-3, but 5.1 Dolby, true 5.1 mixing in an NLE, ASIO driver support so I can use my high-end Delta 1010 card and converters for video editing as well as for Cubase VST 32 audio recording, decent DVD authoring, AND MPEG2 encoding, all on top of one of the most touted NLEs available on any platform.
Seems like a no brainer. The only thing holding me up is I'm wondering how the MPEG2 encoding with Vegas 4 compares to the stellar encoding of Procoder? Has anyone done side-by-side comparisons? Or can anyone offer any comparison of the two under the hood that would help me decide whether there will/should be a substantial difference in quality achievable at the same data rates? Does the MPEG2 encoding under Vegas even allow, for example, 2-pass encoding and variable bit rates?
Thanks in advance for any input.