Comments

BillyBoy wrote on 5/30/2003, 7:26 PM
DVD-A will ALWAYS recompress your files (audio part) if you only give it a Plain Jane MPEG-2 file that has both a video and audio steam. NOTHING wrong with that. Does no harm, quality wise you'll never hear the difference unless you're superman.

The confusion comes from DVD-A flagging the file saying its going to recompress the audio and some may freak wondering why. Its got to do with the specs. Silly world. In most of the world PAL it will accept as-is. for us in the United States and Japan, we're in the NTSC universe and that don't allow a MPEG-2 audio stream. The funny thing is other applications just go and do what DVD-A does, recompress, they just don't tell you they are.

If you want to avoid it then you'll need to render twice. There is a special DVD-A video template in Vegas 4. Actually several. Then render the audio seperately. If you give it the same file name then DVD-A won't nag and it will use it without flagging it. Like I said at the start a 'none problem' really.
Spot|DSE wrote on 5/30/2003, 10:15 PM
If you liked that though, render to Windows 9. I can hardly wait for Windows Media to kill MPEG, as MPEG simply sucks compared to 9 at equal bitrates and frame size. No wonder Hollywood is taking to 9 and future Windows Media so quickly. And *most* of these issues go away quickly, with greater DRM.
vicmilt wrote on 5/30/2003, 11:42 PM
Yo Spot -
On another thread (tonight), I'm asking, is there a good "universal" compression scheme I can use to guarantee (more or less) high quality playback, on most Windows machines??
What codec do you use to compress in Windows Media, and still get small files (with great quality?).