Originally posted by Philip
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Trying to author my first BRD's...?'s
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Originally posted by gdame View PostGreat Thread.
Thank you Mark & Jerry!
Good Luck Philip.
Yes....thanks....I believe I am on my way now. I wasn't that far off in what I was doing initially. I have a feeling a few of the BDREs I made will work but may not look as good as I hoped. I have a feeling the one I did in Encore got re-encoded. Now I know enough to be really dangerous...but at least have a fighting chance to create some discs.
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Originally posted by planetweckesser View PostPhillip - another alternative is to encode Canopus HQ to an .m2t with PCE or, better yet, with Canopus Speed Encoder (don't know if it is still available) and then put the resulting .m2t file into Sorenson 4.3 or 4.5 and produce a blu-ray compliant file (.m2v - elementary stream) - the settings for this and other encoding programs are found in the Roxio Community website for DVDit Pro HD : http://forums.support.roxio.com/inde...howtopic=21049
This should give you a starting point - also in the "Important Topics" section of the same website will be DVDit Pro HD disc playback compatibility - this probably also holds true for Encore.
I have made over 20 blu-ray BDMV projects with this program - all with several titles per disc, motion menu backgrounds and motion chapter buttons - I'm sure you will be able to do the same with Encore - main thing as stated by others here is to get a blu-ray COMPLIANT file made and then the rest is easy.
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Originally posted by shueardm View PostIndeed, some things have changed since i last used PCE. I am using EDIUS 4.6 which is many point releases after I last looked.
This is quite east really,
Start wizard, choose "Use the ProCoder Express for EDIUS Wizard to select a target" > HD (High Definition) > Mpeg-2 > select appropriate frame size and frame mode > output file details > select advanced output settings box > change from Mpeg-2 Program stream to Mpeg-2 Elementary stream and the file will be ok for authoring.
Grass Valley should add a Blu-ray Mpeg 2 quick selection now to the wizard.
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Originally posted by Philip View PostBTW....I checked PCE under the HD MPEG settings and the quality was set to high with IntraDC on 9 by default.
This is quite east really,
Start wizard, choose "Use the ProCoder Express for EDIUS Wizard to select a target" > HD (High Definition) > Mpeg-2 > select appropriate frame size and frame mode > output file details > select advanced output settings box > change from Mpeg-2 Program stream to Mpeg-2 Elementary stream and the file will be ok for authoring.
Grass Valley should add a Blu-ray Mpeg 2 quick selection now to the wizard.
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Originally posted by Philip View PostI did see on the internet that Sorenson was a good encoder and really fast but when I feed a Canopus HQ file to Squeeze 4.3 it errors out. Do I need to upgrade to 4.5 or just do full blown Procoder.
BTW....I checked PCE under the HD MPEG settings and the quality was set to high with IntraDC on 9 by default.
This should give you a starting point - also in the "Important Topics" section of the same website will be DVDit Pro HD disc playback compatibility - this probably also holds true for Encore.
I have made over 20 blu-ray BDMV projects with this program - all with several titles per disc, motion menu backgrounds and motion chapter buttons - I'm sure you will be able to do the same with Encore - main thing as stated by others here is to get a blu-ray COMPLIANT file made and then the rest is easy.
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Originally posted by Jerry View PostIt appears that the disc is still a BDAV with a header page. Then you can input your chapter points for access to points along the timeline.
PC MAG review:
The BDAV (Blu-ray Disc Audio Visual) format doesn't support menus, but although you can't have chapter menus, with discs you make using PowerProducer 4, chapter points let viewers advance from section to section using buttons on their Blu-ray remotes—a convenient feature.
After this article is done I will be using Encore CS3 exclusively for authoring...at least till DVD Lab Pro adds BluRay support. :-)
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Originally posted by shueardm View PostOk, that's new to me.
RE: harder than DVD, not really, it's the encoding that is harder due to a lack of real guidelines and encoding tools, not the authoring.
PC MAG review:
The BDAV (Blu-ray Disc Audio Visual) format doesn't support menus, but although you can't have chapter menus, with discs you make using PowerProducer 4, chapter points let viewers advance from section to section using buttons on their Blu-ray remotes—a convenient feature.
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Sorenson is twice as fast as ProCoder for Mpeg2 HD, but with the latest EDIUS 4.6 installed Sorenson can't be used, it filps the image.
It's been a while since I used PCE for Blu-ray, last time i looked it didn't work by default, I'll give it an other go.
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Originally posted by shueardm View PostOk, that's new to me.
RE: harder than DVD, not really, it's the encoding that is harder due to a lack of real guidelines and encoding tools, not the authoring.
BTW....I checked PCE under the HD MPEG settings and the quality was set to high with IntraDC on 9 by default.
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Originally posted by Philip View PostBTW...the version of Cyberlink I got has PowerProducer and I was able to make a BDMV disc and a BDAV disc. .
RE: harder than DVD, not really, it's the encoding that is harder due to a lack of real guidelines and encoding tools, not the authoring.
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Originally posted by Jerry View PostWhat you need to know, and also express in your article, is that it is not as simple as getting a bluray burner and software and making a blu-ray disc.
Yes, it is much easier these days than it was 2 years ago when I started. However, just making one mistake can create a non-compliant blu-ray file.
Get used to that term, non-compliant.
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My advice is to get the software installed, be prepared to sit at your computer for a couple of days, make sure you have a blu-ray player or ps3 (not a computer) to test playback, have a BD-RE disc available and try, try, try.
I wish you luck in your endeavour.
I will be stressing that point you mentioned about BluRay authoring is not as simple as DVD authoring is. I am well aware of that and will make sure to pound that point home to the readers.
BTW...the version of Cyberlink I got has PowerProducer and I was able to make a BDMV disc and a BDAV disc. Of course the Cyberlink Player will only play BDAV discs so I have no idea if the BDMV actually works yet. The BDMV in Cyberlink was not too terribly complicated and if it works may be easier to learn than full blown Encore....it just won't make discs as pretty as Encore will...Encore has better templates for menus.
Thamks for the help.
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Originally posted by Philip View PostI will see about getting the full blown Procoder in a few months when business really starts picking up.
I know the Cyberlink will not be the best alternative. In the article I am writing I am attempting to lay out a path for easy BR authoring using tools most Edius users will have. Not all Edius users will have Encore but if they have a BR burner they will probably end up with Cyberlink. I want to compare the 2 against each other for compatibility and ease of use for basic authoring duties...nothing fancy.
So how does one use PCE to make Legal Mpeg2HD files? Now I'm curious. :-)
When you say basic authoring duties, do you mean w/menus? If so, you will not be getting that from Cyberlink. These will be BDAV disks. If you want menus, Encore CS3 will deliver a BDMV disc. DVDITPROHD will also deliver a BDMV disc. If you are doing the article, you might as well include them.
Do a search for PCE and how to make legal MPEG2HD files. It is there on the web.
What you need to know, and also express in your article, is that it is not as simple as getting a bluray burner and software and making a blu-ray disc.
Yes, it is much easier these days than it was 2 years ago when I started. However, just making one mistake can create a non-compliant blu-ray file.
Get used to that term, non-compliant.
I'm sure Mark will agree with me on this: Over the last couple of years of burning Blu-rays it has been more of an art than a science. Trial and error of various programs as well as blu-ray firmware enabling playback of BDMV discs have all been obstacles in the path of a succesful blu-ray burn.
Any one piece of information that you would get posted here would just be a piece to a very complicated puzzle.
My advice is to get the software installed, be prepared to sit at your computer for a couple of days, make sure you have a blu-ray player or ps3 (not a computer) to test playback, have a BD-RE disc available and try, try, try.
I wish you luck in your endeavour.
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I think the main thing is use Main Profile at High Level and IntraDC Precision (9)
Really, I think you should forget the Cyberlink program for authoring, it only makes BDAV discs which is not the same as BDMV, you can't make menus for example.
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