OT: Another strike against Blu Ray

Comments

Laurence wrote on 9/5/2007, 10:27 AM
Yeah, I know, I know... the clients aren't asking for HD yet. The problem is that SD quality is just horrible. Feature movies shot on film and transferred to DVD with 3:2 pulldown don't looks so bad, but video shot with typical mini-DV cameras, even the best of them, looks just awful even compared to the cheapest consumer level HD camcorders. Our clients may be happy with web cam (that's all SD is) quality video for now, but SD quality video just looks too bad to last all that much longer.
JJKizak wrote on 9/5/2007, 11:03 AM
Windows does well on my machines also except for boot time and shutdown time. But if you change your "C" drive to a Seagate SATA 3 300gig 16meg cache you will crap your pants at how fast windows boots up. Less than 27 seconds with Trend micro running on a Pentium 2.8.
JJK
apit34356 wrote on 9/5/2007, 11:09 AM
JJKirzah, I take it you don't go out much when your working on your hardware-----"you will crap your pants"----- ;-)
JJKizak wrote on 9/5/2007, 11:26 AM
Now that you brought that up, you are correct. I have an enlarged prostate and sometimes you don't know when or what is going to come out, even with Flowmax. Like Cole Younger used to say "It's a wonderment".
JJK
jwcarney wrote on 9/5/2007, 2:58 PM
<<Right now it looks to me like Blu-ray is trying to discourage burning HD content on actual Blu-ray blanks and instead encouraging low volume producers into using the AVCHD on DVD+-R format instead. This is conjecture however. I'd love to know the official stance.
<<
Laurence, if that's true, then I'm okay with it. I thought only HD DVD allowed one to burn AVCHD onto dual layer DVDs for playback.
That means that most people already have the equipment to burn their hi def content.
No problem creating AVCHD either, even if it takes longer.
Laurence wrote on 9/5/2007, 3:12 PM
Well the HD DVD spec allows you to burn AVCHD video on a regular DVD+-R, but the Ulead program we have been using does not yet.

I haven't burned an AVCHD disc yet. I recently took Nero off my computer because one of the programs in the suite kept trying to play through and catalog all the HD video on my drives. It was going through this process unbelievably slowly and I couldn't seem to bypass it or use my computer for video editing while it was doing this.

I have been meaning to try again but I have been afraid of messing up a system that is currently working pretty well. Anyway, one of the Nero programs is supposed to burn AVCHD discs quite nicely.