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Sonic DVDit Pro 6 + eDVD 4:
Corporate Authoring with Pro Features (11/2005)
by Douglas Dixon
Basic Editing
Advanced Editing
DVD When You Need It
Interactive DVD on PCs -- Sonic eDVD 4
References
So you want share your new production on DVDs, but you're not sure which
software to use? Especially for enthusiasts and corporate users, the
template-driven "automated" approach used in consumer tools like Sonic
MyDVD and Ulead DVD MovieFactory can limit your ability to create a
custom look and navigational flow. But more professional tools such as Apple
DVD Studio Pro, Adobe Encore DVD, and Ulead DVD Workshop can
require a significant investment in becoming proficient with all their features,
which is a problem for occasional users who are not focused on DVD production.
But once you want to escape the limitations of these basic tools, it's a
pretty big step up in price and complexity to the more professional tools (from
around $50 to $100 US up to the $350 - $500 range). For this reason, Ulead
introduced DVD Workshop Express for $300, with the same DVD Workshop interface
and some pro features removed.
Meanwhile, Sonic Solutions has taken another approach with the new Sonic
DVDit 6 and DVDit Pro 6, introduced in July 2005 for Windows XP (www.sonic.com/products/professional/dvdit).
DVDit has been targeted especially to corporate users who wanted to create
custom DVDs without a lot of fuss, using a straightforward drag-and-drop
interface for assembling assets, designing menus, and laying out the navigation.
DVDit 5 also included the bonus ability to import projects from the Sonic MyDVD
consumer application, offering a nice path for users to gain experience with
automated DVD creation and then move up to customized design.
The base Sonic DVDit 6 product (still at $299) has a significantly enhanced
interface and menu design capabilities. Then for $100 more, DVDit Pro 6 adds an
array of professional features, including multiple audio and subtitle tracks,
associated navigation control, clip playlists, Dolby Digital 5.1 audio, and pro
mastering options for content protection. And there's more -- DVDit Pro 6 now
includes the full version of Sonic eDVD 4 (available separately for
$199), which you can use to create enhanced DVDs for computer playback, with Web
links and local links to images, documents, animations, and more (the base DVDit
6 includes eDVD LE for adding just Web links).
So let's take a quick tour of DVDit Pro 6 to highlight the new professional
capabilities, and suggest why you might be interested in them.
DVDit version 6 carries on the drag and drop interface of previous versions,
but with a cleaner and less modal design -- instead of clicking on buttons to
switch between authoring steps, you can now just simply click on tabs in the
main windows to access whatever elements you want. And you can reorganize the
windows and save them as workspace layouts.
In the Basic layout, you use the Project window to assemble your video clip
Titles, create Menus, and build Playlists. As you edit, use the main Preview
window to lay out your Menu and Title designs. Use the Palette window to access
menu Templates, menu background Images, imported Media, menu Buttons, and Button
frames.
Menu editing
The Project and Palette windows use a visual Thumbnail view to preview your
assets and DVD elements, though you can also switch to a Details view, with a
hierarchical list of Menus and nested buttons, Titles and chapters, and
Playlists and movies. These are handy for quickly reviewing and accessing all
the different elements in your project.
DVDit can import most common video formats, including AVI, WMV, QuickTime,
MPEG-1,-2,4, and Microsoft recorded TV (DVR-MS). It also can import projects
from MyDVD, as well as discs recorded on other platforms -- DVDs from MyDVD or
DVDit in Sonic OpenDVD format, and DVDs recorded on set-top recorders in DVD+VR
format.
As in MyDVD, you also can import collections of images and create a video
slideshow from up to 999 pictures, with dynamic transitions. You also can build
an audio track from multiple songs, and then synchronize the slideshow to its
length.
Slideshows
In the Advanced layout, to further customize your project use the Attributes
window to set Menu and Button properties. And use the Timeline window to
assemble multiple tracks, with up to eight additional audio tracks and 32
subtitle tracks per movie.
Full windows
With multiple tracks, you can create multi-language discs, or include
alternate soundtracks or commentary tracks. And you can add subtitles displayed
over the video, as easily as clicking in the subtitle track and typing the text
in the Edit Subtitles dialog.
Subtitles
And with playlists, you can re-use the same movies in multiple ways on a
single DVD. For example, you can have a Clip menu to select individual movies to
be played, and also have a Play All button to play through a list of them. Or
you can provide the option to play highlights, or selected movies -- including
jumping directly to a chapter within the movie.
With the new navigation options, you can create custom links from buttons to
menus and movies, including selecting a new audio or subtitle track for a
Commentary button. You also can set the End Action for a movie to automatically
continue playing another movie, or return to a menu. Similarly, you can set
menus to be timed, so if no selection is made they will time out and move on to
begin playing a default movie.
For more control, you can set the routing of the buttons on the menu, to
specify the default button when you link to the menu and how the selection moves
as you press the arrow buttons on the remote control. Now you can create hidden
buttons that will jump to secret extra "Easter Egg" content on the
disc.
Finally, DVDit Pro 6 provides extensive control over MPEG video compression
options, can encode audio to Dolby Digital stereo. It can import and pass
through Dolby Digital 5.1 material, or you can use the separate Audio Transcoder
add-on for $599. And it provides professional mastering to DLT tape, including
CSS and Macrovision content protection options.
DVDit is targeted to people like video enthusiasts and corporate users who
want to have more control over customizing their DVDs, but need an accessible
application that they can pick up every now and then and just use, without
investing significant time in becoming experts. The interface and menu design
features in DVDit 6 let you drag and drop your way to a clean DVD design, with
all the elements visible and accessible in the tabbed windows and big
thumbnails. It's also a great step up from Sonic MyDVD, since you can import
existing MyDVD projects and OpenDVD discs to enhance their template-based look.
You also really should consider taking the step up to DVDit Pro 6, even if
you don't need multiple audio tracks or subtitles. In particular, the playlists
and advanced navigation links really add tremendous flexibility in designing
your disc. And if you are at all interested in interactive discs, the addition
of eDVD alone should close the deal.
Check the Sonic website for trial versions of its products.
DVDit Pro 6 has a wonderful extra bonus -- the full version of Sonic eDVD
4 is included with the product for creating interactive DVDs (www.sonic.com/products/professional/edvd).
Now you can play your DVD on a computer and have it display additional
information to extend the content -- Web links to online content, and also links
to almost any kind of other material stored on the disc itself -- Web pages,
documents such as manuals and spreadsheets, Flash animations, audio and video
clips, and even executable programs
To use eDVD, first create your disc as usual using any authoring tool, and
build the final DVD files to hard disk in the standard VIDEO_TS directory
structure. Then you run eDVD to add interactive links at chapter points in your
production -- to be displayed when the user clicks a menu button, or even when
just playing along through the content. Finally, burn the result to DVD,
including the original VIDEO_TS folder and the additional eDVD data and included
files.
You even can customize the look of the player, and control options including
the location and size of the displayed windows, and whether the DVD playback is
paused when they are displayed.
When played back on a set-top player, the DVD plays as originally authored --
the eDVD links are ignored, so you may want to include some screens to explain
how to play the enhanced disc. But when played on a computer, the DVD auto-runs
the InterActual Player application (player.interactual.com)
to play back the disc and display the linked material (this needs more user
intervention on the Mac). Other players including CyberLink PowerDVD and InterVideo
WinDVD now support the eDVD links as well.
While you need to run the eDVD software on a Windows XP machine, the
resulting discs are cross-platform, and can play on either Windows (98SE or
above) or Macintosh (OS 10.3 or higher) systems. If you burn the final disc on a
Mac, you even can include different executables for the two platforms.
Sonic - DVDit Pro 6
www.sonic.com/products/professional/dvdit
Sonic - eDVD 4
www.sonic.com/products/professional/edvd
Sonic -
MyDVD
www.mydvd.com
InterActual player
player.interactual.com
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