Hi
I have never did this before and the manual is not much help?
I have an edited audio for a short camera video (4 min)
I bounced the audio track as QuickTime video
But, when playing the edited audio track, I still here the unedited audio from the video going straight to my outputs per meter bridge. Even when I mute all tracks?
How is it going straight to my output?
Suggestions
Don
How to export mp4 edited movie?
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This forum is for discussion related to the use of Digital Perfomer in the context of television and film scoring and post-production.
This forum is for discussion related to the use of Digital Perfomer in the context of television and film scoring and post-production.
- donreynolds
- Posts: 1287
- Joined: Wed Nov 24, 2004 10:01 pm
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How to export mp4 edited movie?
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Re: How to export mp4 edited movie?
Which editor are you using? I've been using Adobe Premiere Rush for short videos and have never experienced such.
Re: How to export mp4 edited movie?
Absolutely, jumping from 8GB to 16GB of RAM is a smart move. It's a sweet spot for video editing at 1080p without overcommitting resources. Adding two more 4GB sticks should work smoothly with your existing setup, giving you that extra oomph without the hassle of selling and upgrading to 16GB strips.
Now, for the video card, your current GTX-1060 should suffice since you're not diving into 4K editing. Video memory becomes more critical as you increase resolution and complexity, but for standard edits, it's not the primary concern. On the topic of smooth editing, I've found Movavi particularly user-friendly. As an mp4 editor, it's versatile and intuitive, offering a straightforward platform that doesn't skimp on necessary features. It's been a reliable tool for me, simplifying the editing process without the need for complex setups or steep learning curves.
Now, for the video card, your current GTX-1060 should suffice since you're not diving into 4K editing. Video memory becomes more critical as you increase resolution and complexity, but for standard edits, it's not the primary concern. On the topic of smooth editing, I've found Movavi particularly user-friendly. As an mp4 editor, it's versatile and intuitive, offering a straightforward platform that doesn't skimp on necessary features. It's been a reliable tool for me, simplifying the editing process without the need for complex setups or steep learning curves.