I would really appreciate some help...
We want to be able to edit, on an average dual core laptop, a 7 minute programe that will go online.
We are using Pinnacle Studio 14 and we have a usb 320 gig external hard drive.
We are complete amatuers so there won't be anything fancy in the programme.
Questions
1) Can we do it?
2) If we can, can we share the external hard drives ? So if i'm working on a part of the programme and my friend is working on another can we swap external hard drives and work on each others?
3) What other questions should I have asked that I haven't?
Any help would be much appreciated![]()
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 15 of 15
-
AMD Phenom II x4 processor, Gigabyte 880GA-UD3H mobo, Corsair 4GB (2x2GB)DDR3 PC3-10666 (1333) RAM, WD Cavier Green 1TB sata HD, OCZ Fatality 550w PSU,OS Windows XP 32 bit
-
Is the external hard drive USB or Firewire? USB can be frustratingly slow to edit from.
Hope you visit our site. ~john
Pinnacle Studio Video Editing.com -
What video format?
SD MPeg2?
SD DV?
SD other?
HD HDV?
HD AVCHD?Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
The external drive is USB 2, couldnt afford the firewire : (
I'm not sure what you mean by video format, I've captured the video from the camera which uses mini dv tape. The camera is a Sony HDV 1080i and the footage once captured is .avi
I thought when you're editing you are working on the project file which isn't the actual footage?AMD Phenom II x4 processor, Gigabyte 880GA-UD3H mobo, Corsair 4GB (2x2GB)DDR3 PC3-10666 (1333) RAM, WD Cavier Green 1TB sata HD, OCZ Fatality 550w PSU,OS Windows XP 32 bit -
persephone , in the future please use a more descriptive subject title in your posts to allow others to search for similar topics. I will change yours this time. From our rules:
Try to choose a subject that describes your topic.
Please do not use topic subjects like Help me!!! or Problems.
Moderator redwudz -
I did consider putting a different subject for the very reason you stated but I wasn't sure what a more appropriate title would be because the questions seemed quite general.
How about
Pinnacle - editing using external hard drive - is it possible?AMD Phenom II x4 processor, Gigabyte 880GA-UD3H mobo, Corsair 4GB (2x2GB)DDR3 PC3-10666 (1333) RAM, WD Cavier Green 1TB sata HD, OCZ Fatality 550w PSU,OS Windows XP 32 bit -
Your camcorder is HDV format. It is intended to transfer video streams 3 ways
1. IEEE-1394 (Firewire) as HDV (high def) format.
2. IEEE-1394 (Firewire) as DV (standard def) format. HDV on tape can be exported standard def DV.
3. HDMI uncompressed.
USB is supported for stills, not video. Some cameras stream over USB in low res webcam format.
If your laptop doesn't have an IEEE-1394 port, you need to find a computer that does have the port so you can capture to files (DV-AVI or *.mts) and copy them to an external drive.
As for editing, a typical dual core laptop will do well with DV format but may struggle with HDV. You would import the files into your Studio program and run some test edits.Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
Thanks edDV
I capture the video using my computer, not one of the laptops, which does have firewire. I've just copied the video across to one of the external drives and tried it on my laptop using the usb connection.
When I started using Studio the video was flickering lots on the preview screeen ( and I thought "Oh no I've spent that money and it's not going to work") But then I closed the program and reopened it again and the video is playing fine.
I've seen seen it do that flickery thing before, but I'm not sure what it means and I've not got the language to google it (flickery - I wonder how many hits that would get me lol)
At least I know it's do-able now which was the big question - I'll google the file formats you mentioned in your earlier post to get my head round that - so thanks for that too.AMD Phenom II x4 processor, Gigabyte 880GA-UD3H mobo, Corsair 4GB (2x2GB)DDR3 PC3-10666 (1333) RAM, WD Cavier Green 1TB sata HD, OCZ Fatality 550w PSU,OS Windows XP 32 bit -
It will be a struggle on a typical laptop. It wouldn't be a problem with eSATA disk to laptop connections. Those use a hardware disk controller that is unaffected by OS operations. USB2 drives use a software disk controller that can be interrupted by other running processes.
One workaround is to copy the files to be edited to the notebook drive first. It is best to defragment the laptop c:\ drive first. As the c:\drive fills to near capacity, fragmentation will increase.
Further: Once captured properly to mts files, there is little risk of frame loss during actual editing. The problem is achieving 1x playback for preview and searching the file for edit points. That is where a USB2 disk connection may bog down. Once edited and rendered, the file should play properly on a faster computer even if it doesn't play smoothly on the laptop.Last edited by edDV; 5th Dec 2010 at 16:10.
Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
Hi edDV
We are doing a project at work and up to now we have been copying the footage onto the volunteers hard drives but they are already begining to notice the space the footage is taking up on their laptops, thats why I have been looking for another solution.
When I capture the footage off the camera it is captured as .avi not mts?AMD Phenom II x4 processor, Gigabyte 880GA-UD3H mobo, Corsair 4GB (2x2GB)DDR3 PC3-10666 (1333) RAM, WD Cavier Green 1TB sata HD, OCZ Fatality 550w PSU,OS Windows XP 32 bit -
Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
We are doing an internet TV local news project, so the end result is for hosting on the internet but I think it would be really good to give everyone involved a DVD of all the programmes produced once the project has ended.
AMD Phenom II x4 processor, Gigabyte 880GA-UD3H mobo, Corsair 4GB (2x2GB)DDR3 PC3-10666 (1333) RAM, WD Cavier Green 1TB sata HD, OCZ Fatality 550w PSU,OS Windows XP 32 bit -
What format do you plan for internet distribution? Flash?
If you edit DV format, you can easily export to MPeg2 DVD. DV resolution matches DVD at 720x480.Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
We have been having discussions about where to host the content once we have done it - our view is to put it on YouTube as that is where most of our audience is viewing their content from - our session facilitator suggested Vimeo which looks much more professional but I don't believe as many people will find it there.
When I did a little tester to see how it went I used mpeg2, although to be completely honest I've only just found an answer to how we manage with so many large files I haven't really thought too much about how we export it - but i would definately be coming here to get advice
(for information we had an editing session today with the volunteers and the reports are that working with the external drives worked fine)AMD Phenom II x4 processor, Gigabyte 880GA-UD3H mobo, Corsair 4GB (2x2GB)DDR3 PC3-10666 (1333) RAM, WD Cavier Green 1TB sata HD, OCZ Fatality 550w PSU,OS Windows XP 32 bit -
OK, you need to separate issues.
1. Shooting format with Sony HDV 1080i camera. Your choices are
- DV (720x480i) standard def
- HDV (1440x1080i) high def
I suggest you test your process first with 720x480i DV-AVI format. The Sony camcorder can export either format above as DV-AVI (13GB/hr) so you can shoot HD but edit SD. If your clients complain about file size, you could offer an MPeg2 recode but these will be lower in quality and less easy to edit. The HD tape masters can be saved for future HD edits.
2. Client editing would ideally be done DV-AVI to DV-AVI. This gives a DV-AVI quality edit master that can be converted to DVD or any distribution service. The DVD could be encoded 720x480i without need to deinterlace. The Internet distribution uploads may need to be deinterlaced re-encoded to h.264 before upload.
The above can all be done in HD format but you may need to upgrade the field editing laptops. Once you get everything running at standard definition, you could do an HDV test project to see which laptops need replacement. HDV file sizes are the same as DV-AVI but the processing demands are much greater.Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about
Similar Threads
-
Service to edit 4 minute video
By qjuice in forum EditingReplies: 8Last Post: 5th Sep 2011, 11:57 -
Laptop processors I7 v quad core? and what is 'turbo mode'
By Rudyard in forum ComputerReplies: 11Last Post: 28th Jan 2010, 23:03 -
laptop output, to save online videos
By snafubaby in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 1Last Post: 27th Apr 2008, 01:48 -
Intel Slashes Quad-core, Dual-core Processor Prices
By louv68 in forum Latest Video NewsReplies: 0Last Post: 22nd Apr 2008, 18:14 -
customizing a laptop online
By patrick_jimmy in forum ComputerReplies: 4Last Post: 2nd Oct 2007, 12:25