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Toast dvd 14 for mac
Toast dvd 14 for mac












toast dvd 14 for mac
  1. #Toast dvd 14 for mac movie
  2. #Toast dvd 14 for mac tv

YMMV but this is how it seems to be with standard definition 4:3 PAL projects. mov files even if playback setting is set to High Quality - if in addition the scaled size is set to 720x576, then interlacing is preserved but then the aspect ratio slightly distorted. On the other hand, later Toast versions like v10 deinterlace iMovie's input reference.

#Toast dvd 14 for mac movie

So even in Toast 7.1.3 the user must copy the *.mov from *.iMovieProject/Shared Movies/iDVD/ package, open it with QT Player Pro, choose Window/Show Movie Properties/Video track/Visual Settings/ and set High Quality ONLY playback. mov's playback setting from the iMovie's default deinterlaced blend mode to interlaced: And even then you must manually save the input reference. mov (which carries iMovie chapter's to Toast, BTW). it correctly honors the playback settings of the input iMovie reference. IMO Toast 7.1.3 is the last version that correctly handles interlacing in iMovie projects, i.e. Do a search up here for the WD player we've had a few threads extolling its virtues.

#Toast dvd 14 for mac tv

If you need a good way of playing the downloaded videos and don't have a means to connect a computer to a projector, an iPod, AppleTV or a WD TV Media Player work great. I tend to use about 1000kbps for 30fps video and 128kb or 160kb for the audio (no more than 160 or it won't play in an AppleTV or an iPod) unless you have fantastic audio equipment on the playing end of this, it's a waste of bandwidth anyway. iMovie must not have the file open when you do this. This saves you the trouble of having to export from the iMovie project. That reference file contains all the edited footage including transition, effects, etc.

toast dvd 14 for mac

Look inside the Media folder for the reference movie and simply drop it into any of the apps I mentioned (but don't -move- the file out of the project!). Control-click on the project file and "show contents". You'd just need to drop the reference movie that's inside the iMovie project file. If so, there are many apps ( Handbrake, MPEG Streamclip, Video Monkey, etc.) that will handle this. You might want to try a different encoding scheme than what iMovie will do when you tell it to go to an iPod (640x). DV is 640 pixels wide so keep it there it will look fine. You can do this directly from iMovie, if you wish. I haven't done much with iDVD for a long time and usually only had one title so I can't help you with that.Īs for distribution over the Internet: H264 is the way to go. But more and more the new version is my preference. They are very different and I was slow to like the new iMovie. I like both iMovie HD and the new iMovie in iLife 09. It probably sounds like I think Toast is better but there are times when iDVD is perfect for what I need to please a client. I am much more familiar with Toast than with iDVD. In either of those cases then Toast 9 is needed. Toast 10 is definitely the best version of Toast unless you aren't running OS !0.5.x or you have a great need for DivX encoding. Oh, and Toast isn't just a video DVD application so even if you never used it to make a video DVD you might love having it for other purposes. You also can use your own pictures for the menu background in Toast (if that is what you were asking). Toast has a continuous play setting so each video will play without returning to the menu. iDVD has a much superior DVD slide show feature. As for DVD authoring, Toast forgoes motion menus but provides Dolby Digital audio encoding which iDVD lacks. Clearly iMovie is best for editing because Toast and iDVD don't edit video (although you can mark segments to trim out of a video using Toast).

toast dvd 14 for mac

Each is better at some things than the others and the same can be true of different versions of the same app. I don't think it is fair to claim which is best over all.














Toast dvd 14 for mac