

- #Sony vegas movie studio hd platinum 11 keeps crashing 720p#
- #Sony vegas movie studio hd platinum 11 keeps crashing 64 bits#
- #Sony vegas movie studio hd platinum 11 keeps crashing pro#
The supported video files for Vegas Movie Studio does not list ".mov" files. There is no degradation in picture quality at all in the edited videos. Vegas Movie Studio accepted the Canon mov files with no complaints.
#Sony vegas movie studio hd platinum 11 keeps crashing 720p#
I edited 720p mp4 files downloaded from YouTube and 720p mov files from our Canon Elph 500HS camera.
#Sony vegas movie studio hd platinum 11 keeps crashing 64 bits#
He still got about a 30% increase in speed (as I recall) switching from 32 bits in version 11 to 64 bits when going to version 12 even with the graphics acceleration disabled.Īfter about a week of editing using Vegas Movie Studio Platinum 12, I can report that I did not have a single crash or hiccup. Regarding crashes frequently, I did read a post that said enabling acceleration on his graphics card caused problems and disabling it fixed the problems. I probably won't be handling 60 fps video though. Will be happy to post results on the things I use, which might cover most of your list.

Complicated user interface with very small fonts.This led to requirement for other software.Cannot write H.264 that Windows Media Player can play.Difficult to produce various types of output, e.g.No (easy?) way to handle 60 frames/second video.Tries to keep everything in a weird proprietary codec.Could not identify many video types by suffix.(I just purchased a copy of Sony Movie Studio Platinum Suite 12 this past week.)Ĭan you please follow up here on this, Sky? I don't read the Video forum because it seems relatively inactive. Just my viewpoint and I'm sure there's others with the reverse viewpoint.
#Sony vegas movie studio hd platinum 11 keeps crashing pro#
IOW, I wouldn't assume that you need to start out using Premiere Elements in order to move to Premiere Pro later, as they're likely very different products anyway (just as Adobe's products like Photoshop Elements and CS6 are very different for still image editing). Then, if you decide you need more than it gives you at some point a year or two down the road, just reevaluate the available options.

It looks like Amazon has a really good deal on it right now, too (only $59.99): You'll see separate links you can click on to find out more about the other products the Suite version includes) This product (and you can download a trial to see if you like it or not). So, if I were using Windows, I'd probably look at Sony Movie Studio Platinum 12 Suite as a lower cost solution, since the Suite version also includes a lot of extra software (it bundles Sony Movie Studio Platinum 12, Sony DVD Architect Studio 5, and Sound Forge Audio 10 in one Suite you can buy). With Sony Vegas, you've got a pretty big difference in what's included in one product versus another, too. Of course, the version you're using will make a difference, as products are updated on a regular basis. Or, see this post from a different member in the same thread: Some of the previous threads where I've seen users of both Adobe Premiere Elements and Sony Vegas reply to seem to lean towards Sony Vegas being the better solution.įor example, note this post from last year:
