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All replies
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Helpful answers
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Jun 5, 2015 2:04 PM in response to gsf1by Old Toad,You have to remember that iDVD and video DVDs are standard definition. The images and videos get resampled down to 720 x 540 pixels. It will always look sharper on the computer than when played on a TV set.
This Apple document discusses preparing images for iDVD: iDVD '09 (7.x): Preparing images for iDVD slideshows
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Jun 6, 2015 7:20 AM in response to Old Toadby gsf1,Thanks to Old Toad for the answer. I was aware of that DVD (and iDVD) imposes a standard format, but I didn't realise that the loss of quality
is so "visible". When I want to see my holiday photos and/or my generated "film" in 1920*1080 format I use AppleTV to see them on the TV or of course
directly on my iMac. However I want to share my "film" with my friends who have neither iMacs nor AppleTV.
So to keep the picture quality you need to render the "film"on a BlueRay disk, but how??
Can I use Apple's Final Cut Pro together with a 3'rd party BlueRay burner ?? Neither Macs nor iMacs are able to burn BlueRay disks as far as I've investigated.
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Jun 6, 2015 8:27 AM in response to gsf1by Old Toad,Neither Macs nor iMacs are able to burn BlueRay disks as far as I've investigated.
If you have a BlueRay drive connected to your Mac and the right software you can burn BR discs. For use with iDVD your should redo the movie in 480p. You can still have the 1080p version for use with AppleTV.
Bengt Wärleby's post in this topic describes why 1080p shouldn't be used for idVD: . However, Brad Wright2 posted a link in the same topic to a website on transferring HD video to DVD. That might be of help to you.
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Jun 7, 2015 4:35 AM in response to Old Toadby gsf1,Thanks again to Old Toad for the answer. Unfortunately the answer missed the point. I'm NOT interested in rendering my HD
photos I have in Aperture (so long as OS X still supports Aperture v3.6 but thats another complicated story) or my films in iMovie onto
a DVD if I loose the HD picture quality. We have now established that I need to burn them onto a BluRay disk. BR burners are available
as 3'rd party products. But what about SW now that iDVD is out of the game? In iMovie I can generate a HD (1920*1080) QuickTime film,
but what SW is available to render it into BR format ?? Is Apple's Final Cut Pro the answer, I can't digest that from the PR on Final Cut Pro.
Are there 3'rd party SW available that can do the job, please can someone advice me.
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Jun 9, 2015 2:01 PM in response to Klaus1by gsf1,Mama mia, its 20 years since I last saw Roxio Toast, I thought it didn't exist anymore.
I should have remembered that myself, thanks to Klaus1.
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Jun 11, 2015 8:26 PM in response to gsf1by Ziatron,Mama mia, its 20 years since I last saw Roxio Toast, I thought it didn't exist anymore.
I use Toast 12 to burn 1080p Blu-ray movies. It works great.
This is my DVD/Blu-ray burner, it has FireWire 800, and USB 3 ports. I get rock-solid performance when making DVD and 1080p Blu-ray movies on my Mac.
It is automatically recognized by OS 10.9.5 or later.
I use it with Toast, iDVD and Apple's Disk Utilities.