Thats funny Ewe, all of my media players play AVI files natively.  MOV files
are a lot more troublesome, but with most phones and gadgets using it
nowadays, I guess they had to incorporate it.

<
http://www.maplin.co.uk/search?c=so&u=strat305&forcelayout=list&criteria=_mpeg4_dvd_player
>

Neil.

On 29 August 2011 08:50, Uwe Soltau <[email protected]> wrote:

> **
>
>
> Mike,
> The export settings are done in Premiere and not in AME.
> You can select "Match Sequence Settings" or select H.264 for Format.
> I don't think that AME will export to the camera but only onto a HDD in the
> computer. You would have to copy the file to a SD card in the camera
> if your camera allows you to do that. I don't think it will play if
> copied in the
> computer (card reader).
>
> If you regularly want (have) to show your videos at different places I
> suggest
> you get a media player. A number of different makes are available.
> I have a Mede8er ( www.mede8er.com ) with its own 500Gb HDD but you get
> them
> without internal HDD and simply plug in an external drive or USB stick.
> They are portable and a big advantage is that play just about anything
> except AVI files.
> Western Digital have a good player as well.
>
> Metadata
> Did you not get a program with your camera to copy the clips incl
> metadata from
> your camera to the computer?
> This won't help you but with my Sony that same program also allows me to
> view
> the clips and the full!!! metadata (similar to Bridge).
> When copying the files it automatically creates a folder with the date
> the clips
> were recoded and puts them in there. That makes sorting and finding clips
> very easy. I also have a number of options how to sort the clips.
>
> When I look at clips in Bridge I get the "Date Created" and "Date File
> Modified".
>
> Uwe
>
>
> On 8/29/2011 3:38 AM, Mike Boom wrote:
> >
> > As an AVCHD newbie, I'm looking for some tips for working with AVCHD
> > in Premiere Pro:
> >
> > 1. I'd like to export finished projects in .mts format, the same
> > format I've imported the source clips in. The reason: I'd like to
> > write them to my camcorder's memory so I can plug the camcorder via
> > HDMI into a high-def monitor and show the finished video. It's easier
> > and more sure than burning a Blu-Ray disk and hoping that the video
> > setup I'm using for playback (often at someone's house) has a Blu-Ray
> > player. My camcorder will only play back AVCHD files (.mts).
> >
> > Is there a way to export to .mts files in Premiere Pro CS5.5 using
> > Media Encoder? I can't seem to find one.
> >
> > 2. Is there any way to view the embedded metadata in the imported
> > .mts files? Bridge will show the date the clip was shot (it displays
> > it as "date modified," which is confusing), but Premiere Pro won't
> > show that information. I ask because if the metadata would show up
> > along with the file, it would make sorting through clips easier.
> >
> > Thanks for any tips from experienced AVCHD hands here,
> >
> > Mike Boom
> >
> >
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>  
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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