![]() ![]() These hits have dates as long ago as 2005! What the Apple have anything useful to say on the topic? Nope. Let's see what other users have to say … Google returns 15,600 hits for "idvd Error During Track Initialization"! Terrific. How about saving the DVD content to a disk image? Twenty minutes later, same problem. Maybe the Mac needs reprogramming with an axe … nope, I'll save that as a last resort. Maybe the Mac needs restarting … nope, restarted, ran up iDVD again, loaded the project, and nyet. ![]() I start burning again and 20 minutes later I get that same message. Huh? OK, let's try what Apple recommends and delete the encoded assets. Select 'Delete Encoded Assets' from the Advanced-menu and try burning this project again." There was an error during track initialization and iDVD can't continue burning this DVD (the disc has not been touched yet!). Whirr, whirr, clunk … 20 minutes later, I am shown the error message: "Error During Track Initialization. I could run it in the iDVD interface and everything worked great – it looked good, it worked well … I was ready to burn a disk. Let's go back to plan A and move all of the content over to iDVD.Īn hour later I had my DVD project set up. Why not use Adobe's DVD creation tool, Encore, rather than iDVD? An hour later I had figured out why … this is a very complicated and counterintuitive tool (unusually so for Adobe). The previously rendered versions of the movie are deleted and replaced by new versions when you render it again.Hmmm. If you make further edits to your project in iMovie after you’ve rendered it, the title bar (which is visible when the project is open) indicates that your project is out of date and needs to be rendered again. In iMovie, an icon appears next to the project’s name in the Project Library to indicate it has been rendered, and in which sizes. Open one of your Apple applications, and then look for the rendered movies in the Movies pane of the Media Browser. Rendering can take up to several minutes depending on the size of your movie and whether you render more than one movie size at once. MB: The size of the movie file in megabytes. Kbps or Mbps: The data rate of the movie in kilobits per second or megabits per second. H.264 or 3GP: The video compression that’s used in the movie.įps: The frame rate of the movie in frames per second. Holding the pointer over the “i” next to the movie dimensions displays the following information for the rendered movies: The size of the largest media used in the project determines the final movie sizes you can render. If you’re unable to select the larger sizes, the original project media isn’t large enough to render in that size. This topic explains resolution in more detail: About image resolution of shared projects. The resolution of the exported movie for each size depends on the aspect ratio (standard or widescreen) you chose when you created the project. The table shows which sizes are best for each viewing device or location, and the resolution of each size (how many pixels it contains). ![]() Select one or more movie sizes to render from the table of options. The Share menu appears in a light gray bar across the top of your computer screen. In iMovie, open the project or select it in the Project Library, and then choose Share > Media Browser. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |