Tuesday, September 12, 2006

DVD, Verizon, and uhhh

First off, I'd like to apologize for the lapse in new material here. I wrote a Lucha article for Andyville on the sixth, but even that was six days ago, so I've really been slacking on the internet publishing front.
I've been incredibly busy wrapping up a Dimbee Multimedia DVD project. The last week has been spent building every component, and perfecting every aspect of the overly complex (yes, everything I do is overly complex) DVD menu structure. It's now finally satisfactory in my eyes, and the customer has given me all the last minute additions to the extras menu, so it's time to release this bad boy.
This was actually my first delve into the world of a large commercial release. I had previously done shorts ranging up to about ten minutes, but nothing too spectacular. This project was also my first experience with a real video editing solution: Sony Vegas. It is expensive, but this software is worth every penny. I experimented with too many software packages to count, but out of all of them, two stood out. One, of course, was Vegas, which was excellent. The other was Avid's FreeDV. I understand that it is a cut down, free version. However, it was beyond useless. I had my movie source split into three large avi files, and FreeDV churned away trying to import them for two days. Even then, it had not completed importing the final one. As I said, I understand this is free software, but I also understand that performance like that isn't going to get people to buy the expensive pay versions. Vegas did the import in near no time (seeing as it worked off the originals instead of making its own files), and once the main feature was complete, it rendered fifty minutes in DVD ready 720x480, 8Mbit MPEG2 in a little under five hours on a 2GHz Celeron. Considering the amount of effects I implemented, I think that's pretty respectable.
For the DVD authoring, I used Sony DVD Architect, another expensive application that proved its worth. It has a very straightforward, but highly effective interface. I like that combination.
Of course, in addition to the use of those two applications, there were hours of painstaking frame by frame work on certain hand made animated graphics, but I'm not going into that. I've rambled about this long enough, so I'm going to move on.
In breaking news, Verizon came out and buried my phone line on the seventh (yes, they did it in less than two weeks, and I didn't have to call them to remind them), so I really have nothing to complain about regarding them right now... other than their complete lack of broadband solutions, but that's been covered.
Now that I've covered all that... I've completely forgotten what I was going to write about. Oh well, perhaps next time.
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Big Cray: Accept No Substitute

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