Someone has asked me to create a DVD video disc from some HD files they have given me.
For importing into DVD Flick or other DVD creation software, would it better for files to be in MP4 or AVI, for best picture quality? Each DVD will be about 90 minutes long. The software I am using can also output MPEG2 and H264 - would MPEG2 be best?
Also, must DVD video be burned at a lower speed to reduce errors? I've burnt many DVD data discs at 16x without any problems.
Finally, would pro software (Final Cut Pro/Adobe alternatives) give much better output? I have noticed some slight pixelation with some discs I have burnt with the various free (and popular) software around. The person is rather picky about quality - he wants the best possible. Commercial DVDs seem to have no pixalation at all (including ones that are two hours long).
I have yet to try out the OEM DVD video software (from Sonic) included with my drive.
Converseen 0.15.2.5-2 by Razvan Serea
Converseen is a free and open-source batch image converter and resizer. It supports over 100 formats, including DPX, EXR, GIF, JPEG, JPEG-2000, PNG, SVG, TIFF, WebP, HEIC/HEIF, and many others. Users can convert, resize, rotate, flip, and compress multiple images at once. It can also transform entire PDF documents into individual image files. Powered by the ImageMagick library, Converseen features a user-friendly interface and is available in both installer and portable versions.
Here’s a list of all the features you can find in Converseen:
Batch image conversion (supports 100+ formats)
Resize images in bulk
Rotate and flip images in bulk
Compress images to reduce file size
Convert entire PDF documents into image files
Support for multiple image formats (JPEG, PNG, TIFF, PDF, BMP, GIF, and more)
Customizable output settings (quality, resolution, etc.)
Image effects and adjustments (such as brightness, contrast, etc.)
Convert images to PDF
User-friendly graphical interface
Support for drag-and-drop functionality
Extract an image from a Windows icon file (*ico)
Supports adding watermark to images
Portable and installer versions available
Leverages ImageMagick for processing power
Allows renaming of images in bulk
Supports EXIF data editing (for JPEG images)
Easy-to-use GUI for non-technical users
Command-line support for advanced users
Free and open-source software
Cross-platform availability
Available in multiple languages
Download: Converseen 0.15.2.5-2 | Portable | 32-bit | ~40.0 MB (Open Source)
View: Converseen Homepage | Screenshot
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Regarding the AI photo, I LOVE AI in that regard, you ask it what you want and it gives you a lovey photo in under a minute, that would taken me an hour to make in photoshop and it wouldn't have looked nearly as good.
2 nights ago I spent a couple hours collaborating with AI. I did not say write me an article. I would write one or 2 paragraphs, then I would ask it to clean it up so it read better but still keeps the information I was trying to convey. Rinse repeat.
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Someone has asked me to create a DVD video disc from some HD files they have given me.
For importing into DVD Flick or other DVD creation software, would it better for files to be in MP4 or AVI, for best picture quality? Each DVD will be about 90 minutes long. The software I am using can also output MPEG2 and H264 - would MPEG2 be best?
Also, must DVD video be burned at a lower speed to reduce errors? I've burnt many DVD data discs at 16x without any problems.
Finally, would pro software (Final Cut Pro/Adobe alternatives) give much better output? I have noticed some slight pixelation with some discs I have burnt with the various free (and popular) software around. The person is rather picky about quality - he wants the best possible. Commercial DVDs seem to have no pixalation at all (including ones that are two hours long).
I have yet to try out the OEM DVD video software (from Sonic) included with my drive.
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