At 02:10 AM 11/3/2006, Sune Alexandersen wrote:
>Of course you can burn HDV to DVD.

I'm trying to come up with a good method for distributing small HDV 
video files on DVD to people who can view it on their computer 
monitor. The best I've come up with so far is to encode to MPEG2 from 
Premiere and save the files on DVD along with an installer for VLC 
media player. The idea is that the recipient installs the player, 
copies the files to hard disk for fast access, then views the files 
in full screen using the player. That typically gives them at least 
the equivalent of 720-line high-def resolution.

Installation and viewing takes some time, though, and many viewers 
aren't going to be interested in going through all that. There are 
also some occasional problems with the recipient's computer not 
having enough power to handle the bit rate of the HDV file so 
playback stutters. That happened when I tried this out on my father's laptop.

Has anyone else successfully distributed HDV files to viewers? If so, 
what save format worked best, and what was the best viewing 
mechanism? Did you have to save the files with a reduced bit rate to 
work on more computers?

Thanks,

Mike Boom 



 
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