Of course it'd be best if you could render the mov file straight outta Vegas. The next option would be to find a decent intermediate that Quicktime can open and then render the DNxHD file straight out of Quicktime. Click Apply and then OK to close the window. ![]() If your video card is not supported, it will not appear in the menu. Click the drop-down menu next to 'GPU acceleration of video processing' and select your graphics card. I just tried the Frameserver route but QuicktimePro couldn't do much with the AVI signpost file, at least within the 10 minutes I was willing to devote to it. Click Options and select Preferences from the bottom of the menu. If the Frameserver would work then that should be better, faster, and not use up disk space. Or you could render an intermediate out of Vegas and then do the same thing. You could use the DebugMode Frameserver to make an AVI signpost file and then use a third party application to make the Quicktime file. So, how to deliver quicktime files to your client if Vegas can't encode them? You might need to try a two-step process. That way SCS can only meet or exceed your expectations. While I suggest you always make support requests because they probably get counted, don't expect an answer. User-to-user forums are your best bet for lucky and/or informed guesswork.ĭoes SCS listen to support requests/product suggestions/bug reports? The answer seems to be Yes if you look at the readme files when new revisions come out. ![]() If you need support you could try paying for it but given people's experience with free support I'd say if you *need* support then SCS products aren't a good choice. The questions about SCS support.as far as I can tell it doesn't exist.
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