
AlChuck
Well-known member
This question maybe doesn't really belong in a Home Recording forum, but what the hell...
Based on my positive experiences with various versions of Sound Forge XP and ACID Pro 2.0, I bought Sonic Foundry's VideoFactory in January after getting a Sony DV camera around Christmastime.
So far I've been a bit disappointed and mystified, and technical support has been nonexistant. (Amusingly, after about 6 weeks I got a reply a week ago apologizing for the long delay and giving a "major product release" as the excuse, and the guy asked if I still needed help and to reply to let him know. I said "I sure do still need help" and have not heard back yet...)
Anyway, my current confusion has to do with opening video files and breaking them into pieces. I have a couple of files of captured digital video in AVI format, and I wasn't really thinking and they are all sort of random sizes. Most, alas, are bigger than 650 MB, so I can't store them on CD-Rs. It occured to me that I could open one of these AVI files, cut off the last half, and save it as another file; similarly save the last half by removing the first half. Seems straightforward -- I do it with WAV files all the time.
So when I do this in VideoFactory, it takes forever. It's as if it has to rerender the truncated file to a different format. I set the video portion to be saved at the same resolution as the original file, but I was stuck with the choice of only 8 bit or 16 bit for the audio data. (The camera captured the audio at 12 bit resolution.)
OK, I can see how this might take a little time, resampling the audio portion of the data and reassembling the file.
Problem is, it takes like forever, nearly always crashed before it's done, and when I do get a file it's enormous, like 5 times the size of the original captured AVI (4 GB), rather than something like half the size. Sure, 16-bit stereo audio data takes more space than 12-bit audio data, but 5 times? Something screwy here.
I tried also rendering a 5-minute portion of one file to a Quicktime movie... the estimated time said 4 hrs... I bailed.
I also took a Quicktime movie that is about 1 minute long abd tried to render it to an AVI file. It took something like 15-20 minutes and when it was done, the AVI is screwy -- the video portion seems to show only the initial frame and the audio is all broken up -- stops and starts, etc.
Any clues, anyone? My system has a 700 MHz PIII and 256 MB RAM -- should be able to handle it.
Also, anyone know of any video editing tools that would allow me to just cut my long AVIs into sub-650 MB pieces so I can at least get 'em off the hard drive and onto CD-Rs for the time being?
Thanks...
-AlChuck
Based on my positive experiences with various versions of Sound Forge XP and ACID Pro 2.0, I bought Sonic Foundry's VideoFactory in January after getting a Sony DV camera around Christmastime.
So far I've been a bit disappointed and mystified, and technical support has been nonexistant. (Amusingly, after about 6 weeks I got a reply a week ago apologizing for the long delay and giving a "major product release" as the excuse, and the guy asked if I still needed help and to reply to let him know. I said "I sure do still need help" and have not heard back yet...)
Anyway, my current confusion has to do with opening video files and breaking them into pieces. I have a couple of files of captured digital video in AVI format, and I wasn't really thinking and they are all sort of random sizes. Most, alas, are bigger than 650 MB, so I can't store them on CD-Rs. It occured to me that I could open one of these AVI files, cut off the last half, and save it as another file; similarly save the last half by removing the first half. Seems straightforward -- I do it with WAV files all the time.
So when I do this in VideoFactory, it takes forever. It's as if it has to rerender the truncated file to a different format. I set the video portion to be saved at the same resolution as the original file, but I was stuck with the choice of only 8 bit or 16 bit for the audio data. (The camera captured the audio at 12 bit resolution.)
OK, I can see how this might take a little time, resampling the audio portion of the data and reassembling the file.
Problem is, it takes like forever, nearly always crashed before it's done, and when I do get a file it's enormous, like 5 times the size of the original captured AVI (4 GB), rather than something like half the size. Sure, 16-bit stereo audio data takes more space than 12-bit audio data, but 5 times? Something screwy here.
I tried also rendering a 5-minute portion of one file to a Quicktime movie... the estimated time said 4 hrs... I bailed.
I also took a Quicktime movie that is about 1 minute long abd tried to render it to an AVI file. It took something like 15-20 minutes and when it was done, the AVI is screwy -- the video portion seems to show only the initial frame and the audio is all broken up -- stops and starts, etc.
Any clues, anyone? My system has a 700 MHz PIII and 256 MB RAM -- should be able to handle it.
Also, anyone know of any video editing tools that would allow me to just cut my long AVIs into sub-650 MB pieces so I can at least get 'em off the hard drive and onto CD-Rs for the time being?
Thanks...
-AlChuck