Search results

  1. P

    Lots of HD trailers at Apple's Quicktime site

    Comparisons have been made by Joe Kane and others. MS VC-1 is better & more efficient, not to mention not as CPU intensive. "Political" indeed. If you do some more research you'll find that MS VC-1 is an "open" codec, MS cannot control it. They did this to be considered by both the HD-DVD and...
  2. P

    Lots of HD trailers at Apple's Quicktime site

    They do, just not as many right now. http://www.microsoft.com/windows/win...tShowcase.aspx
  3. P

    Lots of HD trailers at Apple's Quicktime site

    Like mine. :D
  4. P

    Lots of HD trailers at Apple's Quicktime site

    480p is not a HD resolution. It is a "SD" (standard definition) or "ED" (enhanced definition). 720p, 1080i, and 1080p are what are considered HD resolutions. Some things will label it "HDTV 480p" like XBOX games because only Digital TVs, which are usually HDTVs, can accept a 480p signal...
  5. P

    Lots of HD trailers at Apple's Quicktime site

    That type of hardware and only a 128MB card? You need more my friend. :D Hard drive type and speed can also be a factor. My spec: 3.0GHz Pentium D (dual core) 2GB 667MHZ DDR2 RAM 256MB GeForce 7800GTX 2 SATA-II Western Digital 250GB drives in RAID 0 1 SATA-II Western Digital 400GB...
  6. P

    Lots of HD trailers at Apple's Quicktime site

    CGI in trailers are often early composites that are refined and "massaged" before the final release. They have them there so audiences can see *some* effects. Part of the problem of dropped frames and such is not software. The computer's hard drive can be fragmented, or the CPU can be busy...
Top