Frage von Mütze:Dear Friends Video,
I need your help regarding my quality problem. I take videos with my Sony camcorder in HDR.SR12E to 1080p. Then do I import the videos into iMovie with the latest version. If I then export these movies in full or safe Resolutionund via my Apple Macbook Pro on the TV via DVI-HDMI cable want to see this little "washed out" of the blurred and colors are not so brilliant from. Quite the contrary, when I look at the films directly from the cam on the TV chart. Me and this is not entirely satisfied.
I now have the problem that the 120 GB hard drive of the cam is full and soon my videos, so at max. Quality and would like to view. Further processing of the films I see currently not available, I would just secure.
I have an intervening synonymous Elgato Turbo.264 bought HD videos to convert, but it makes just as modest in quality, such as iMovie.
How can I s.einfachsten So the films s.Mac secure and in good quality on the plasma TV screen?
An export to Apple TV brought no improvement, I see the problem with the conversion of the AVCHD format, or because I was wrong?
For suggestions and ideas, I am very grateful.
Cap
Antwort von domain:
..... see this little "washed out" of the blurred and colors are not so brilliant from. Quite the contrary, when I look at the films directly from the cam on the TV chart. Sounds in all details in accordance with a different, less steep gamma setting of your graphics card. Increase the experimental times and you'll see the colors and the sharpness coming back.
Antwort von Mütze:
Sounds in all details in accordance with a different, less steep gamma setting of your graphics card. Increase the experimental times and you'll see the colors and the sharpness coming back. Hello domain
where I am because one of the? In the System Preferences under Displays? However, since even on the Apple TV is not so brilliant and effective resolution, I see the problem is not hardware or s.der?
Cap
Antwort von Mütze:
None next ne idea?
Thank you
Antwort von WoWu:
Hi Hat ...
With iMovie and the Mac did you not just the perfect support for AVCHD, because the first codec in iMovie in the Apple-internal (intermediate) AIC codec is converted. The codec is not s.die performance codecs out of the camera. There is therefore already lost quality. The Elgato.264 (in the HD version) is synonymous not 1080p, but only supports 720p and synonymous only in the Main Profile and only 5 Mb / s. that is synonymous the maximum data rate for AppleTV, whose HD downloads synonymous only 5 Mbit / s have.
(So if this article of "the finest in the Apple universe HD" talk, then probably with a correspondingly low right).
From YouTube and the other qualities of the Internet times not to speak.
You see, therefore, a difference of 1080p.
You should therefore your films with a program capture, the ACV can edit natively and not in an intermediate codec converts.
Apple will likely only AVC support when the new operating system is released and it updates for the programs there.
Antwort von Alan Smithee:
The Elgato.264 (in the HD version) is synonymous not 1080p, but only supports 720p and synonymous only in the Main Profile and only 5 Mb / s. that is synonymous the maximum data rate for AppleTV, whose HD downloads synonymous only 5 Mbit / s have.
Nope!
From the manual "The output formats in detail:
HD 1080p
Video: H.264 Main Profile, 10 Mbps max.,
1920x1080 max., 30 fps max., Audio: AAC-LC,
Stereo, 160 Kbps, 48 kHz.
Antwort von Mütze:
Thanks for the hints. There is for me at the moment the only option is via Vegas studio in Boot Camp to make or is there another Mac program that the quality is not affected? Final Cut Express or Final Cut, perhaps? Bin for more options and solutions openly.
Thank you very much
Cap
Antwort von WoWu:
@ Alan Smithee
Whatever is now synonymous meaning, since according ELAGO makes the stick for the Apple TV only 5 Mbit / s (of the 24 frames not to mention)
http://www.elgato.com/elgato/int/mainmenu/products/Accessories/Turbo264HD/product3.de.html
H.264 Main Profile, 5 Mbps max., 1280 × 720 pixels at 24 fps or 960 × 540 pixels at 30 fps max., Audio: AAC-LC, stereo, 160 Kbps, 48 kHz. Soundtracks in Dolby Digital !" AC-3, if any, when you export for Apple TV in the target file. @ Hat
If you have Vegas Studio, so I would make, because (so what you hear) is good Vegas AVC support.
At least, I would so capture the footage, so your plate will be free again and you later in the original footage codec can still edit.
But iMovie8 (9) but has a separate Import and archive function in which you have your original footage least Archiving can without creating iLive to import (and thus convert AIC).
A transcoding, I would in any case avoided.