Frage von Daniel Doernen:I would like to archive my projects (eg Adobe Premiere), so I can invite at a later date, the data and make changes.
The projects are, however, generally too large for data back-up on DVD.
Does anyone know a way of compression / decompression, such as or similar to winzip?
Gruß D.
Antwort von VolkerS:
Hello,
any compression is already a problem, since the material should be available even for later use back in original quality. If there are not too many or large projects, would a fat external disk be a good solution. Must you really mitarchivieren the movie files? If you as the individual clips of the tape not be renamed or have stored in different directories, then you can simply import the tape again, and when the project file, simply download enter the new location.
Antwort von Daniel Doernen:
Thanks Volker,
You're right.
Unfortunately, I have in my system, always make sure that no more than 20 clips are saved in a folder. Otherwise, "dice" premiere me the file contents and file names like times confused. This "solution of the problem has already cost me valuable days of my life, and nerves.
Unfortunately, this makes the re-digitization of the many clips in many different folders impossible ... Premiere asks only once for the location and then processes the tape.
Gruß D.
Antwort von Nightfly!:
Hi Daniel!
Adobe Premiere mean you have all the originals in the DV (AVI) (as captured)
Go ahead (once the test had not tried it myself but would have to fold) and convert the files to another AVI format.
Approach for testing:
1.) Take you an AVI file and make a copy of this original.
2.) Convert the AVI file in the appropriate folder to another AVI format (eg
Video: MJPEG, DIVX, ...
Audio: mp3)
3.), the new AVI file must be replaced in the same project Ordener and the old file there.
4.) Run the Project with Adobe. (It should all be found and integrated. ALSO, the new file.)
5.) Check the sections in your project on the modified AVI file.
If everything works, you can confidently all AVI files of your project in the desired format, convert other AVI (BATCH CONVERSION - power of the calculator will zoom out alone) and according to project size.
If all went well you please sign!
Greeting
Nightfly
Antwort von Daniel Doernen:
Hi Daniel!
Adobe Premiere mean you have all the originals in the DV (AVI) (as captured)
Go ahead (once the test had not tried it myself but would have to fold) and convert the files to another AVI format.
Approach for testing:
1.) Take you an AVI file and make a copy of this original.
2.) Convert the AVI file in the appropriate folder to another AVI format (eg Video: MJPEG, DIVX, ... Audio: mp3)
3.), the new AVI file must be replaced in the same project Ordener and the old file there.
4.) Run the Project with Adobe. (It should all be found and integrated. ALSO, the new file.)
5.) Check the sections in your project on the modified AVI file.
If everything works, you can confidently all AVI files of your project in the desired format, convert other AVI (BATCH CONVERSION - power of the calculator will zoom out alone) and according to project size.
If all went well you please sign!
Greeting
Nightfly Hi Nightfly,
Thanks for your idea library.
Will try it in the coming days times.
In the fast gehts unfortunately just do not. Happy to give you
bescheid: ö)
Gruß Daniel
Antwort von VolkerS:
But if you, the AVI to Divx ect. reconversion they are smaller but synonymous poor in quality, that you no later Orginalqqualiät more. Archiving for later Wiedervendung actually makes sense only if they remain here in the original quality.
Antwort von Chris2:
In Premiere Pro, please read the Project -> Project Manager is also a very useful feature pack up a copy of your project, including all required source files (video - / audio clips).
Here you can choose whether you want to continue to import all the clips, or only those that were used in synonymous timelines or whether you want only the clips used and additionally they should be trimmed so that no "excess" material is left .
If you all then, eg with WinRar, divided into mere 4.6 GB large RAR files, then you can secure a larger synonymous Project to multiple DVDs.
Antwort von Nightfly!:
Hello Volkers, Chris2 Hello!
It is clear to me with the quality depending on the selected CODECs and the appropriate settings.
As far as I understand Volkers he wanted but just not four to ... DVDs per project burn to this archive. Therefore, a Geradwanderung between quality and quantity of data is required. I use mostly MJPEG and MP3. Thus I bring down 10-12 GB to 4GB.
The NORMAL Pack Programs (ZIP, RAR ,...) alszu not bring much, because you are not designed for video files.
Greeting
Nightfly.
Antwort von Markus:
Hi All,
I archive my projects (if any subsequent changes should be possible) entirely on external hard disks. Given a price of 50 ct per gigabyte is now no longer an issue. :-)
Otherwise, I archive only (!) The cut movies as DV-AVI, MPEG2 and the accompanying DVD project files on hard drive. So I can at least still DVD menus, chapter points, change, etc., if the time should be necessary.