Monday, May 19, 2014

What is the main difference between Sony Vegas Platinum 9 and the regular Sony Vegas 9?




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im just wondering please list your source
i mean sony vegas movie studio 9 not "the regular sony vegas 9"



Answer
The difference between Vegas Movie Studio 9 and Movie Studio Platinum is, basically, support in Platinum for high definition video, including AVCHD (tapeless consumer high definition).

That's not the only difference, though. Platinum includes support for creating surround sound (AC-3, Dolby Digital, the primary surround format for DVD and also one of those supported on Blu-Ray). You can burn a very simple Blu-Ray disc from the Platinum time-line (you need Vegas Pro's DVD Architect 5 to build a Blu-Ray with the same kind of interactive controls you can use for DVDs in the "Studio" versions of DVD Architect).

The Platinum package includes extra video effects, transitions, and audio effects.. some possible use, but most amateurs would produce better videos if the included fewer effects -- there is absolutely no prize given for using all 350 in a single 10 minute video.

More useful, the Platinum package comes with the color correction plug-in, formerly a high-end option. This tool allows you to correct for off-color, usually due to shooting under weird lighting (basically, any video in which your opinion of what should be white differs from what you see in the video -- this is actually more critical for consumer use, since most consumer camcorders don't have much control over white balance).

All of the Studio versions of Vegas limit you to 4 video and 4 audio tracks (Vegas Pro is unlimited). You CAN work around this by bouncing tracks (eg, render a bunch of them into a single track, then add more on top of that one)... I started doing "media stuff" on a 4-track audio recorder, and this was the standard way of getting around the 4-track limit. Of course, if you find you're spending most of your time bouncing tracks, it's time to buy a Vegas Pro upgrade.

Finally, the Platinum version comes with AVC support (AVC = Advanced Video Coding = MPEG-4 Part 10 = H.264)... AVC is basically the new video standard that's replacing MPEG-2 in many things. All tapeless consumer camcorders use the AVCHD spec (a very specific set of standards built around AVC video), so you need this to work with modern camcorders. But it's also the video format used in the Apple iPod and the Sony PSP, as well as one of the formats in Blu-Ray... so they kind of all go together. Anyway, you can use this to render directly to iPod or PSP format if you like (I've also made AVC videos that play on a Palm TX or a Zune, and as well, it's a decent format for online content downloads, too).




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