Then I figured the most likely explanation was I was trying to burn too fast at my recorder's fastest speed (8x, SuperDrive on a 3.0Ghz quad MacPro with 5GB of RAM) and so I tried slower speeds like 4x, 2x, and then all the way down to 1x. Then I thought it might be the media I'm burning to, but my IT department says my single-layer Imation DVD-Rs are of good quality. I even blew $100 on Toast for the Mac thinking iDVD's burning was the culprit, but get the same type of glitches. I attempted using iDVD several times to burn an auto-playing DVD (no Theme) and got glitches. #Toast dvd vs compressor movie#But the resulting native QuickTime movie plays perfectly on the Mac, whether the movie is 100MB (average compression) or 25GB (No Compression). No matter what I do, the resulting DVD has at *least* two (and often more) deal-breaking video/audio glitches, every time in different places on the disc.Īt first I thought it was my source movie, so I tried exporting with many different codecs, frame rates, data rates, resolutions, etc. I've burned through (pardon the pun) upwards of 10 DVDs trying to make a perfect master (that can be duped later). The content of the video is slow-placed, Ken Burns style portraits of people shot against a white background. I have an 8:40 QuickTime video exported from a slideshow application that I'm trying to burn to DVD for playback on regular DVD players.
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