Ahh, I see. Well, no need to freak. DV video is roughly 13GB for one hour.
So 5 min is 1/12th of an hour, so 13/12 = 1+ GB! Tada.
 

 Jeff Schell, Adobe Certified Expert
<http://www.jeffschell.com/images/atiny.jpg> 

Jeff Schell  <http://www.jeffschell.com/> www.jeffschell.com
. Adobe Certified Expert (ACE) . Adobe Certified Instructor (ACI)
. On-Site, Classroom Training for Premiere Pro, After Effects, Audition,
Encore DVD, Photoshop
. Books:  <http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0321397746> Premiere Pro 2
Hands-On-Training .  <http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0321293983> Premiere
Pro 1.5 H-O-T
. DVDs / Online Tutorials:
<http://movielibrary.lynda.com/html/modListing.asp?pid=60> Premiere Pro 2
Essential Training at Lynda.com
 

  _____  

From: Cordell Hauglie [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2007 9:39 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [AP] Video capture file size



Thanks Jeff! I'm using Premiere 5.0. I'll let it compress and see what 
happens. I was just noticing file sizes and freaked when I saw 5 minutes 
came in as 1+ gig straight off my camera!

Cordell

>From: "Jeff Schell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:trainer%40jeffschell.com>
com>
>Reply-To: Adobe-Premiere@ <mailto:Adobe-Premiere%40yahoogroups.com>
yahoogroups.com
>To: <Adobe-Premiere@ <mailto:Adobe-Premiere%40yahoogroups.com>
yahoogroups.com>
>Subject: RE: [AP] Video capture file size
>Date: Sat, 14 Apr 2007 08:40:24 -0700
>
>If your goal is to make a DVD-movie disc that plays in a standard DVD 
>player
>attached to your TV (like a Netflix movie), then your *only* choice is to
>burn it as MPEG-2. This is the only format allowed in the DVD-movie
>specifications.
>
>In fact, it's not as simple as copying a file to DVD if your goal is to 
>make
>a movie disc. Use Premiere's built-in DVD burning capabilities, or use
>another application to make the DVD movie disc.
>
>If you use another application, you should be able to leave your AVI as it
>is, and that application will take the AVI and convert it for you, so you
>don't have to do anything else. If you use Premiere, then it handles 
>burning
>and changing format as well. So really, all you need to do is edit the 
>video
>and leave it as AVI.
>
>
>
> Jeff Schell, Adobe Certified Expert
><http://www.jeffsche <http://www.jeffschell.com/images/atiny.jpg>
ll.com/images/atiny.jpg>
>
>Jeff Schell <http://www.jeffsche <http://www.jeffschell.com/> ll.com/>
www.jeffschell.com
>. Adobe Certified Expert (ACE) . Adobe Certified Instructor (ACI)
>. On-Site, Classroom Training for Premiere Pro, After Effects, Audition,
>Encore DVD, Photoshop
>. Books: <http://www.amazon. <http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0321397746>
com/gp/product/0321397746> Premiere Pro 2
>Hands-On-Training . <http://www.amazon.
<http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0321293983> com/gp/product/0321293983>
Premiere
>Pro 1.5 H-O-T
>. DVDs / Online Tutorials:
><http://movielibrary
<http://movielibrary.lynda.com/html/modListing.asp?pid=60>
.lynda.com/html/modListing.asp?pid=60> Premiere Pro 2
>Essential Training at Lynda.com
>
>
> _____
>
>
>5 minutes of video captured from my digital video camera is a 1+ gig
>avi file -- what is the best format to render it to before burning to
>DVD? I'm sure I can get great quality video to dvd, but not at this
>size -- what works best?
>
>
>.
>
><http://geo.yahoo.
<http://geo.yahoo.com/serv?s=97359714/grpId=456415/grpspId=1708568768/msgId=
> com/serv?s=97359714/grpId=456415/grpspId=1708568768/msgId=
>24711/stime=1176546658/nc1=4507179/nc2=4025302/nc3=3848643>
>
>
>
>[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>

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