|  | Re: No True BD Authoring software? by Dave Haynie on Sep 2, 2011 at 5:28:10 am |
MacOS PCs may be disadvantaged versus Windows PC, simply because Apple is anti-Blu-ray (they want your video sold on iTunes, only) and the MacOS is a relatively small market. They're kind of anti-DVD these days, too, having pretty much eliminated the full featured DVD tools recently, replacing them with a very rudimentary DVD function in FCP X.
But there's Blu-ray authoring and there's Blu-ray authoring. There are many different solutions for BDMV (HDMV) authoring. Like DVD tools, most of these layer some kind of abstraction on the Blu-ray, so while you can't necessarily access all features, they are true Blu-ray authoring tools. A BDMV is very much like a DVD, though certainly with more features.
On the Mac, you can use Adobe's Encore to author BDMV projects. That's not sold stand-alone, so you need the whole CS5 suite, but given the way FCP X has gone, many Mac users are crossgrading anyway. On Windows, as well as Adobe, there's Rovi's DVDit Pro HD and Sony's DVD Architect.
DVD Architect supports BDMV basically just as high resolution DVD... there's not much in the way of additional features, other than some DVD limits removed. But on the other hand, if you author a Blu-ray in DVD Architect, it's usually take only a few minutes to save off a DVD version of that project. So for small production, that's probably preferable to spending a week or two on an over-the-top Blu-ray.
On the other hand, to create extremely complex BDs, you have the option of authoring a BDJ (Blu-ray Disc Java) disc. I don't know of any BDJ tools that won't break the bank... Sony's Blu-print costs more than any two of my cars (about $50,000)... Rovi's Scenarist BD not far behind at $35,000.
There's no guarantee that any given BD player will play a BDMV disc on BD-R or BD-RE, or one without AACS copy protection. In theory, unlike DVD, the copy protection is mandatory, and as usual, the Blu-ray spec did require support of BD-R or BD-RE in stand-alone players. A few may play another format, BDAV (a single video file on BD, no menus... some NLEs can burn BDAV directly from their timelines) but refuse to play BDMV. In short, SNAFU as usual.
With that said, Blu-ray is by far the best digital video format around, at least this week. Most online "HD" is really piss poor quality by comparison. Yeah, I know that the Apple spin on digital media is that less is ok, but NOW is important (eg, quality can suck as long as I get it now). Not a big fan of that... I work too hard to deliver top quality video.
-Dave
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