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Choppy Pixelated Crap!!!


Tysyacha

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At least that's what my music video turns into when I try to use Sony Movie Studio 7.0 Platinum Edition. The previews play fine at a very fast framerate, but when I try to render the video as an .avi file, the pictures come out all choppy and pixelated in spots. Anybody got any bright ideas? Please help!!! (Note: This includes using another program to edit the movie.)

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What other proggie are you using?

I'd check both of them in the settings to make sure it's set to save them as a high quality .avi file with 30 frames/sec minimum.

 

Edit: There's a Tech forum here for these kind of threads, JSUK

This is where all the master geeks hang out and where we plan to take over the world...You'll also have a better chance for some tech support there, whether it's hardware or software related :)

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At least that's what my music video turns into when I try to use Sony Movie Studio 7.0 Platinum Edition. The previews play fine at a very fast framerate, but when I try to render the video as an .avi file, the pictures come out all choppy and pixelated in spots. Anybody got any bright ideas? Please help!!! (Note: This includes using another program to edit the movie.)

I'm not too familiar with that program, but since you said 'pictures' I'm assuming you imported still images into the program. The .avi format might not like the format of the images you imported and that could be causing the problem. Try saving the images in a different format (I recommend .tif or .png) and then import them again. o_Q

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What other proggie are you using?

I'd check both of them in the settings to make sure it's set to save them as a high quality .avi file with 30 frames/sec minimum.

QFE

 

Most vidoe editing software is pre-loaded with NTSC (tv) settings (29.97 framerate). Make sure your settings are for computer video, 30frames per second. Also, don't render "full size". AVI while uncompressed and huge is still not native 720x480. If you're rendering full, it's stretching your video. Half the size and double-check your codec.

 

If you're working on a PC, sometimes it's better to use .wmv format rather than avi. AVI format is bloated, unnecessary and far past it's prime. If you really feel all giggly, go apple h.264 format.. lossless and purty.. though entirely unsure if it's You Tube compatible (.mov format).. :giveup:

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