#Roxio toast 7 for mac
If an ordinary Windows PC can do it, why is iMac's result so disappointing? Roxio Toast 7 Titanium for Mac Supports FLAC 20:15:11 I just found out today that the brand new Roxio Toast 7 Titatium for Mac supports both FLAC and Ogg encoding from other audio formats as well as CD audio and DVD burning using FLAC and Ogg files. One of my friend has downloaded the film from handycam to his Windows PC and burned VCD using Nero, and the image quality he got is same as of the Camera (as seen on TV).
#Roxio toast 7 movie
I want to share the movie with some of my friends who own stand-alone VCD Players for viewing the film on TV set. You are much better off choosing DivX as the format although only newer DVD players are capable of playing DivX. SVCDs look better (MPEG 2 at low resolution) and can hold about 35 minutes per CD. You can read Toast Help about making VCDs. VCDs are the poorest quality video because it gets compressed to MPEG 1. If your iMovie Project File is in your Movies folder you can select and drag it by using the Toast Media Browser (click the Media button to enter the browser). Just drag the iMovie Project File that you've saved to the Toast video window and Toast will select the movie from your timeline. You don't have to export anything from iMovie. In short, kindly let me know the best procedure for burning VCD & DVD using iMovieHD with Toast 7. In the iMovie export option, whether Toast7 can be shown? If yes, how?Ĭ) In which format the iMovie Project is ti be compressed for making a VCD (DV, QuickTime.
Kindly let me know the following:Ī) In which format the movie is to be imported in iMovie Project (DV etc.) For this I have recently purchased a 17" imac which has iMovieHD. I am new enthusiat eager to edit my home movies shot with a miniDV Hanycam. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. I don't know if anyone else has this problem. making music dvd's (it's the one that ends with the words 'weird, wonky')-the pitch of the audio is lower than the original, up to a half step and quite noticeable (on my systems). Let me know if the sound plays when you do that.Ĭould you help me with another problem that I posted on another forum: re. One way to test if the audio is present is to insert the VCD in the Mac and try playing it with VLC Media Player. My daughter never had a problem hearing audio from the VCD on her Sony and Panasonic players, but my son never could get it to work on his Toshiba player. I had a no sound problem trying to play VCDs on my Pioneer DVD player until I went into the player's audio set up and changed a setting that converted MPEG audio to PCM. DVDs use AC-3 or PCM audio but VCDs don't. It could be that your DVD player isn't set up to play the MPEG2 audio that's on VCDs.