If you still have the raw DV material, you might try do convert directly
to interlaced MPEG2. In my tests iMovie did not care about interlacing
and the MOV's it produced were horrible.
This is what I used to transcode several .dif files, as produced by
iMovie into MPEG2:
#!/bin/sh
for f in clip_
* Scott Ehrlich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2005-05-31 20:45]:
> I captured home video from a Sony camcorder to my G3 running 10.3 via
> iMovie. I then used iMovie to convert the captured files to MOV -
> averaging 12 - 13 gig per file.
>
> I now want to perform the final step of burning the MOV files
I captured home video from a Sony camcorder to my G3 running 10.3 via
iMovie. I then used iMovie to convert the captured files to MOV -
averaging 12 - 13 gig per file.
I now want to perform the final step of burning the MOV files to DVD.
I tried doing this with Roxio Toast 6 Lite but its encode
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