Archived from groups: rec.video.desktop (
More info?)
first thing, a coupla questions
1. DV or analog?
2. how much editing will you be doing?
3. if you edit at all, are you going to go special effects crazy?
I ask, because what I infer from the original post is a desire to
simply capture the video to the PC and burn DVDs. While the debate can
rage on over which software is best, most of those mentioned would be
overkill for what I read as the original intent.
If you are going to do some serious editing, I would suggest
downloading demo versions to see which tool works best for you, which
one thinks like you think.
Years ago I checked out Media 100, the Video Cube, Avid etc... because
of my time in TV news and actually shooting film, Avid made the most
sense to me, it was familiar right off the bat. clips, bins, etc.
For you it might be completely different. I have been curious about
Vegas (I use Ulead MSP 6.5 at home and Avid XpressDV at work) but just
read a hands on review in DV magazine, and have decided it's not for
me.. only one sequence per project, heck that would never work for me.
I build small sequences and then build my final program from there.
And the unusal naming sitaution...as the writer said, "Vegas just
happens to utilize a Starbucks approach of referring to commong things
by unique names."
<markwco*remove to reply*@comcast.net> wrote in message news:<smlll01vihrecte2omr9a6pnv3033c390g@4ax.com>...
> I am going to be doing a lot of desktop video, basically inputting
> video from a camcorder mostly to create DVD's. I am wondering which
> program I should use, Pinnacle Studio 9, ULead Videostudio 8, or Adobe
> Premiere Pro 1.5?