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Have you tested it with videos you know worked before? I found that if the
video wasn¹t in the exact DV format (720x480) Apple DV or DV/DVCPRO it
wouldn¹t play. I talked this over with the Canopus rep. He said the
codec
is very specific and if you change anything, it won¹t work.
I¹m finding this whole Canopus discussion very helpful, especially from
the
Firewire latency point of view, and the narrow and quite specific range in
which the Canopus box works.
By the way, I didn¹t mean to offend anyone with the semi-pro comment.
In
fact when I spoke to the Canopus tech about not being able to get Sorenson
or MJPEG-A encoded videos up on the NTSC Monitor with the ADVC110, and
bitched about how my Aurora card would support almost any codec and even
project your desktop on an NTSC monitor, he said this box was really
designed as a low cost solution for consumer equipment (VHS decks,
camcorders, etc). He didn¹t say semi-pro, he said home, and I
interpreted
that answer as semi-pro. I agree that if you can make it work in a pro
environment, then for you it is the pro solution that works. I had hoped
for a little more flexibility but for the price, I can¹t complain. My
original card that became a paper weight when Apple went to PCI-X buses, the
Aurora Igniter was $1,500, the FuseX that became obsolete with OS X 10.4.10
was $550, and the Canopus was a quite reasonable $209.00.
The one thing I can¹t seem to get past is that with DV, the data rate
is
considerably higher than H264, Sorenson, MJPEG, etc. That means if I¹m
doing a big score with lots of Vis, I have to eliminate the video for the
later (bigger)stages of the production, or go to a small Sorrenson window,
or start freezing a lot of tracks. That was not an issue with the (may it
RIP) Aurora card. Oh well.
Best,
James
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