I did a video telling my September 11 story. I converted the file - WMM can't read MOV files - then loaded it into Windows Movie Maker and did some editing of the video. I started with an 81 meg, 22 minute video that is cut to about 5 minutes and perhaps 35 meg.
My machine, as I noted in the thread on Starcraft 2, has 1.5 terabytes of disk space remaining. It also has 3 GB of memory. It's a 64-bit processor running 32-bit Windows XP Professional.
Windows Movie Maker can save the to-be-rendered video up to the 15% point, then fails saying it "cannot save the file to the specified location" giving the implication something is missing.
I did the Crepes video you guys sponsored on this machine and I've done others here as well.
I tried it again on a second machine I have on my desk, "CUBE", which is a dual core, 32 bit 3GHZ processor with 512 meg of memory and 67 GB of free disk space. I copied the files over and set it up locally there. I tried saving the rendered movie and it also quits on this machine at 15%.
This is weird as I've never had WMM refuse to save and render the output video. I guess the only thing left to try is to fire up my old HP Pavilion A305W and copy the files there, then try saving. I've not ever had a problem saving a video on that machine.
It's possible that I used a different resolution and WMM can't handle it, except I remember the Crepes video was in HD, so that makes no sense. I looked up on the Internet and the suggestion was to try cutting the video and rendering it in pieces, then bring it back together in WMM and merge the pieces.
I believe there's also an upgrade to WMM and I might see if that's available.
Windows Movie Maker Won't Save
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- Tdarcos
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Windows Movie Maker Won't Save
Given the general rise in expenses and fall in the typical standard of living, the future ain't what it used to be.
- AArdvark
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What version of movie maker are you using? I ask because I had to revert back to WMM 2.6, as anything later simply locks up my machine. I wonder if it's a Microsoft thing. Actually, all the other video editing programs I tried pretty much sucked out. WMM seems to be the best of a bad lot.
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- Tdarcos
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I have version 5.1 of Windows Movie Maker, I loaded the program and confirmed.
What I have done is switched to a freeware program called Videopad Video Editor, and it seems to work. I redid my video in HD, didn't have to convert it - Videopad reads MOV files fine - and it's currently creating an AVI, for the 5 minute video the rendering time is 37 minutes. Oh, and the raw 8 minute HD video uses 168 meg of disk space.
What I have done is switched to a freeware program called Videopad Video Editor, and it seems to work. I redid my video in HD, didn't have to convert it - Videopad reads MOV files fine - and it's currently creating an AVI, for the 5 minute video the rendering time is 37 minutes. Oh, and the raw 8 minute HD video uses 168 meg of disk space.
Given the general rise in expenses and fall in the typical standard of living, the future ain't what it used to be.
- Tdarcos
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I was thinking that if I was a professional doing video for a living I'd probably buy Sony Vegas.
Jesus Christ, you'd have to be a professional, Sony Vegas costs $600! I've bought brand new computers and never spent that much!
Jesus Christ, you'd have to be a professional, Sony Vegas costs $600! I've bought brand new computers and never spent that much!
Given the general rise in expenses and fall in the typical standard of living, the future ain't what it used to be.
- pinback
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- Tdarcos
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You know, at first I thought you were making a Vegas joke, because the term for the net a casino makes from what it takes in after paying winners is called the "drop".Ice Cream Jonsey wrote:Ah! Ah ah!pinback wrote:Sony Vegas is a lot harder to drop, though.Tdarcos wrote:Jesus Christ, you'd have to be a professional, Sony Vegas costs $600! I've bought brand new computers and never spent that much!
Anyway, the new program did okay. I will be posting the video in the "ten years ago" thread.
Given the general rise in expenses and fall in the typical standard of living, the future ain't what it used to be.