![]() ![]() Alternatively, Cinematize Pro HD can do high-quality downmixes of multichannel audio tracks to stereo or stereo surround. The extracted clips produced by Cinematize Pro HD have broad compatibility with popular video editing programs, mobile devices, and the web. This includes video editing software such as Final Cut, Avid, Premiere, iMovie, Vegas, and QuickTime, presentation software such as PowerPoint and Keynote, mobile devices such as iPods, iPhones, or iPads, set-top boxes such as AppleTV and Roku, and web sites including YouTube and Vimeo. "We are very excited to finally deliver the product our customers have long requested. MIRAIZON CINEMATIZE FULLĬinematize Pro HD is the first full quality HD clip extractor and converter for Blu-Ray and AVCHD. Its quality and its ability to fine-tune clip selection fill an apparent void in the market. I believe Cinematize Pro HD will solve a lot of problems for our customers," says Miraizon founder and CEO David Salamon. More information about Cinematize Pro HD including a complete list of features and a free downloadable demo is available at. Priced at $129.95 as a download, Cinematize 3 Pro HD for Macintosh and Windows are both available for purchase immediately in Miraizon’s online store at. I only hope it's what I think it is.Headquartered in Silicon Valley, California, Miraizon was formed to deliver high-quality, reliable, and easy-to-use digital media software products. if this really is the thing, I'll gladly pay them what they're asking. I've been waiting for four years now to have something like this for Mac, that would go from an unencrypted DVD to a Quicktime file, without separating the audio and video. Two, are these people good free-software citizens? I noticed they use some free stuff, and I want to make sure anyone I'm supporting isn't stealing from the FOSS movement (that they're complying with the licenses, I mean).Īnyway, it seems like a GREAT piece of software. I'm a little nervous to buy for two reasons: one, are their any sync issues? A 1% error in a 10s clip isn't noticeable, but in a 2hr movie it's ruinous. I'd rather copy all the data to a HD and work on it from there. I didn't try doing it direct from a disc in my optical drive that sounds like a great way to burn out my SuperDrive. I encoded from an unencrypted DVD that I had copied to my hard drive. Both were great, audio sounded nice, totally in sync. I tried one 10s chunk to H.264 and another to 3ivX. I've only used the 2.03 Demo, which is limited to 10 seconds of each chapter on the DVD.but it seems to work flawlessly. 2.0.7, but since I moved up to the pro version (thanks dev!), I don't know. However, after demanding a refund on this, the regular version, since it wouldn't work right, they seemed to have corrected the non-physical disc issues quite nicely in the Pro version. ![]() I also find the interface for segment selection horribly busy, it seriously needs to make things simpler. which is silly, since you can use MacTheRipper for free to take anything off of physical DVDs (which I do for all the stuff that comes off my Sony DVD-Recorder). This is odd as it didn't seem to have this problem with physical discs. most of the time it grabbed less than 50% of the stream, not including either the start or end, but the file sizes were correct. ![]() I had 2.0.2 and even though it previewed in and out points just fine, in almost all cases (iDVD and DVD recorder discs) packaged in image files, it failed to actually pull the proper start and end points.
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