I have a company offering to transfer my Super 8 film to either MPEG or .avi. I thought I wanted .avi to avoid any quality loss and to keep these files as sort of a digital archive of the original.
I will subsequently be editing the files with a video editor and make a DVD.
Does it really matter which file type I get? What would you recommend?
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I will subsequently be editing the files with a video editor and make a DVD.
That is, assuming the avi version would be uncompressed, highest possible quality.There's no place like 127.0.0.1
The Rogue Pixel: Pixels are like elephants. Every once in a while one of them will go nuts. -
That is, assuming the avi version would be uncompressed, highest possible quality
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Yes, I would definitely specify "no compression".
Then you will have the most pure, so to speak, version of your source with which to work.
:c)
Also, this procedure would not cost them any more than a compressed version except that it will take much more disk space.There's no place like 127.0.0.1
The Rogue Pixel: Pixels are like elephants. Every once in a while one of them will go nuts. -
Thanks, Gees.
The company I have been exchanging emails with about the transfer is really reasonable at the transfer rates ($0.07/foot film). Their media costs eem high, though. A single MiniDV tape is $20. Each "DVD" is $45. They told me my 1350' of Super 8 (~75 minutes of run time) would take maybe one "DVD" in MPEG formate and 4 "DVD's" in .avi format. I thought these were standard file types that could be simply transferred to a standard CD-R.
What's right here? -
I won't say anything about the prices, except, shop around. :c)
If you are asking for transfer only services (ie: no playable DVD with menus & extras) in my mind they should charge you a MINIMAL amount for the additional discs (4 vs 1) that transferring in avi would require.
As I said that would require a large amount of disc space, and is not feasible on CD. You would have to break the footage up among too many discs. Whether mpg or avi.
I would think transferring to avi is the least work intensive for them and I would pay no more than the mpg (DVD ready) conversion price, plus a reasonable per disc charge. Certainly not $45.00 each x 4.
ie: footage is footage no matter the final conversion type.There's no place like 127.0.0.1
The Rogue Pixel: Pixels are like elephants. Every once in a while one of them will go nuts. -
DV = 3.7Mb/second= 222Mb minute --> ~19 minutes 40 seconds on a DVD disk.
..A single MiniDV tape is $20..
Have the tape made . Buy a cheap 20Gb harddrive**. Beg/borrow DV camera. Transfer DV 'footage' on tape to the hardrive. Edit at your leisure.
** 75 minutes @ 222Mb minute is 16.6 Gigabytes. Of course ,nothing wrong with a 200Gb drive either.
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