Project too complex?
Adam Gold
07-09-2005, 09:35 PM
From the other threads on this group, I think I know the answer here, but
wanted to check with those smarter and more experienced than I am...
I have about a four-minute video I'm putting together, and my problems are
twofold:
1) MM slows to a crawl and hangs very time I add or delete a shot, so I have
to save with every mouse click, and
2) When saving to DV-AVI it seems to be dropping more than the one frame per
scene documented here. It's like someone's stepping on the gas and whole
musical beats are skipped over, like a bad mp3 rip.
The video has about 200 shots, with probably about 50 fades and a few minor
effects. Is this video just too complicated for MM to handle? Do I need to
split it into two, three or even four parts when it's done?
Saving to WMV works fine but I'd really like the higher quality of DV-AVI
prior to burning. I can't split it now because the whole thing is synched
to one song and every change would affect the entire timeline.
Just wanted to be sure there's nothing I can do with HW or SW. My PC has a
3.2 gig processor, 2 gigs of RAM and 500 gigs of HD space, and no other apps
are ever running. Original video is 3-chip DV and audio is a wav file.
Thoughts?
Thanks,
ag
I don't think your problem is a complexity problem because that would effect
the final rendering but isn't likely to slow down adding clips to the
timeline as you describe. It sounds more like a resources problem with your
computer.
What are your computer specs?
Here's some steps you can take:
1 - Make sure you don't have any TSR programs running in the background
taking up resources.
2 - Download, update, and run AdAware http://www.download.com/
and Spybot S&D http://www.digital-fortress.ws/spybot/
3 - Defragment your HDD(s) - Fragmentation will slow a system down
considerably
4 - Locate all your clips on the same HDD if they aren't already - This will
speed things up dramatically.
Here is a link to an article written by Graham. It actually pertains to
video capture but the optimization of your computer relates to your problem
as well.
http://www.myvideoproblems.com/Tutorials/OptimiseMyPcForVideo.htm
--
Wojo
www.remember-christopher.dostweb.com/Wojo's_Place/
"Adam Gold" <AdamGold@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:0C150BE6-7894-45C3-8070-341E37C95663@microsoft.com...
> From the other threads on this group, I think I know the answer here, but
> wanted to check with those smarter and more experienced than I am...
>
> I have about a four-minute video I'm putting together, and my problems are
> twofold:
>
> 1) MM slows to a crawl and hangs very time I add or delete a shot, so I
> have
> to save with every mouse click, and
> 2) When saving to DV-AVI it seems to be dropping more than the one frame
> per
> scene documented here. It's like someone's stepping on the gas and whole
> musical beats are skipped over, like a bad mp3 rip.
>
> The video has about 200 shots, with probably about 50 fades and a few
> minor
> effects. Is this video just too complicated for MM to handle? Do I need
> to
> split it into two, three or even four parts when it's done?
>
> Saving to WMV works fine but I'd really like the higher quality of DV-AVI
> prior to burning. I can't split it now because the whole thing is
> synched
> to one song and every change would affect the entire timeline.
>
> Just wanted to be sure there's nothing I can do with HW or SW. My PC has
> a
> 3.2 gig processor, 2 gigs of RAM and 500 gigs of HD space, and no other
> apps
> are ever running. Original video is 3-chip DV and audio is a wav file.
>
> Thoughts?
>
> Thanks,
>
> ag
Adam Gold
07-09-2005, 09:36 PM
Appreciate the tips. I tried them all with only minimal improvement. The
rendered video is still very choppy and pretty unwatchable. Also, I just
noticed an audio dropout with every cut.
As I noted in my original post, PC specs are pretty ample so I don't think
that's the problem. Anyone have any other ideas?
Thanks,
ag
"Wojo" wrote:
> I don't think your problem is a complexity problem because that would effect
> the final rendering but isn't likely to slow down adding clips to the
> timeline as you describe. It sounds more like a resources problem with your
> computer.
> What are your computer specs?
> Here's some steps you can take:
> 1 - Make sure you don't have any TSR programs running in the background
> taking up resources.
> 2 - Download, update, and run AdAware http://www.download.com/
> and Spybot S&D http://www.digital-fortress.ws/spybot/
> 3 - Defragment your HDD(s) - Fragmentation will slow a system down
> considerably
> 4 - Locate all your clips on the same HDD if they aren't already - This will
> speed things up dramatically.
>
> Here is a link to an article written by Graham. It actually pertains to
> video capture but the optimization of your computer relates to your problem
> as well.
> http://www.myvideoproblems.com/Tutorials/OptimiseMyPcForVideo.htm
>
> --
> Wojo
> www.remember-christopher.dostweb.com/Wojo's_Place/
>
> "Adam Gold" <AdamGold@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
> news:0C150BE6-7894-45C3-8070-341E37C95663@microsoft.com...
> > From the other threads on this group, I think I know the answer here, but
> > wanted to check with those smarter and more experienced than I am...
> >
> > I have about a four-minute video I'm putting together, and my problems are
> > twofold:
> >
> > 1) MM slows to a crawl and hangs very time I add or delete a shot, so I
> > have
> > to save with every mouse click, and
> > 2) When saving to DV-AVI it seems to be dropping more than the one frame
> > per
> > scene documented here. It's like someone's stepping on the gas and whole
> > musical beats are skipped over, like a bad mp3 rip.
> >
> > The video has about 200 shots, with probably about 50 fades and a few
> > minor
> > effects. Is this video just too complicated for MM to handle? Do I need
> > to
> > split it into two, three or even four parts when it's done?
> >
> > Saving to WMV works fine but I'd really like the higher quality of DV-AVI
> > prior to burning. I can't split it now because the whole thing is
> > synched
> > to one song and every change would affect the entire timeline.
> >
> > Just wanted to be sure there's nothing I can do with HW or SW. My PC has
> > a
> > 3.2 gig processor, 2 gigs of RAM and 500 gigs of HD space, and no other
> > apps
> > are ever running. Original video is 3-chip DV and audio is a wav file.
> >
> > Thoughts?
> >
> > Thanks,
> >
> > ag
>
>
>
Project too complex?