AT&T Carrier - Mac convert Panasonic HDC-SD900 1080/50p MTS to Apple ProRes robinhan - Wed Feb 29, 2012 10:46 pm Post subject: Mac convert Panasonic HDC-SD900 1080/50p MTS to Apple ProRes
Mac convert Panasonic HDC-SD900 1080/50p MTS to Apple ProRes for FCP
Panasonic HDC-SD900 features 3.5-inch LCDs and new touch-operations to realize much smoother shooting and playback than in previous models, it has 1080/50p recording and 3MOS system. Users need only to attach the optional 3D Conversion Lens (VW-CLT1) to the camcorder to record 3D images in AVCHD format firsthand.
When you get a Panasonic HDC-SD900, you may use it to record some important moment or happy time. Then you can get many AVCHD files. For Mac users, Final Cut Pro is an ideal video editing software. You can do many things with it. But the problem is FCP is not compatible with 1080/50p MTS well.
So what we should do is converting Panasonic HDC-SD900 1080/50p MTS to FCP support video formats like MOV, MP4, DV etc. Mac Panasonic HDC-SD900 MTS to FCP Converter is such a software which allows Mac users to convert Panasonic HDC-SD900 1080/50p MTS to FCP on Mac.
With this Mac MTS to FCP Converter,you can convert Panasonic HDC-SD900 1080/50p MTS to Apple PorRes 422 which supported by FCP well. In addition, convert MTS to other video formats like AVI, WMV, MPG, MKV, VOB, FLV, 3GP etc on Mac is also allowed.
Now, follow the guide start covnerting Panasonic HDC SD900 1080/50p MTS to Apple ProRes MOV on Mac.
Step 1. Add Panasonic HDC SD900 files into this program
In this step, you can click "Add" button to upload the MTS files which you want to convert from your Mac.
Step 2. Choose the output format
Click on "Format", and select output format from the drop-down list, as we are converting Panasonic HDC SD900 MTS to MOV, so we choose Final Cut Pro > Apple ProRes 422 (*.mov) as output format.
Step 3. Start converting MTS to Apple ProRes MOV for FCP
How to convert Kodak video to DVD disc on Mac? Is there an easy way to burn Kodak video to DVD disc on Mac so that you can play Kodak video with DVD Players on anywhere? Follow the articles and you will get the answer, it will tell you how to convert Kodak video to DVD on Mac in an easy way.
Kodak has gained the favor of many users by the popular types of video cameras such as Kodak Zi8, Kodak PlaySport, Kodak PlayTouch etc. As the Kodak Camcorder becomes more and more popular, most of the Kodak fans may need the Kodak Video to DVD Converter for Mac to convert Kodak video to DVD disc and then play Kodak video on DVD Players.
Kodak Video to DVD Creator for Mac is the best partner for you to burn Kodak video files to DVD Disc on Mac, with the powerful Kodak video to DVD Converter for Mac, you just need some easy clicks to burn kodak video to DVD Disc on Mac. Not only this, but also to convert other different format videos to DVD like MP4, MOV, MPEG, ASF, etc.
How to convert Kodak video to DVD on Mac OS X?
Step 1: Insert an empty DVD disc
Free download, install and run DVD Creator for Mac, and insert an empty DVD disc into your Mac if you want to burn Kodak video to DVD disc.
Step 2: Add Kodak video files
Choose the Kodak video files which you want to convert it to DVD, and import/drag it into DVD Creator for Mac.
Step 3: Select DVD formats
DVD Creator for Mac provides four output options: DVD Disc, ISO file, DVD Folder (Video_TS) and DVDMedia file. Choose the right output option and set proper output parameters.
Step 4: Start to burn
Every thing are ready, just click "Start" button to burn Kodak video video to DVD now! ujinwang3 - Wed Dec 17, 2014 11:45 pm Post subject:
Pavtube Video Converter is an all-in-one video converter and editor tool based on NVIDIA CUDA technology which is specially developed for users to convert videos from one format to another.
Pavtube Video Converter has been designed to cover all your video conversion needs while providing you with a few interesting editing features. It supports nearly all known video formats and codecs for both standard and high-definition video, including MKV, AVI, MP4, M4V, VOB, MOV, WMV, Tivo, FLV, MPG, WebM, MVI, VRO, MTS, M2TS, M2T, TS, MXF, XAVC, along with audio extensions like MP3 and FLAC, etc. Batch processing is permitted.
In order to manage such a vast list of video, audio, and image file formats, the program offers you a somehow organized list of output profiles.
These are classified following different criteria, such as device manufacturer (Apple, Samsung, Google, Sony, HTC, Amazon, Asus, Microsoft, Acer, Nokia, LG, Panasonic, Toshiba, HuaWei, BlackBerry, Lenovo or HP, etc.), software tool (Windows or PowerPoint), media type (Common Video or Common Audio – for audio extraction purposes), or device (Zune, Xbox 360, Xbox One, Wii, Windows Media Player, VLC, AC Ryan Player, HiMedia 900B, PS4, PS3, WD TV Live Plus Media Player, Xtreamer Ultra, Dune HD Player, Seagate, Popcorn Hour, Asus O!Play Mini Plus, KDLINKS Media Player, ViewSonic NMP-708 and so on), although you can also find some more "exotic" categories, such as Remux, Interlaced, Lossless raw video, or DV. Useful as it may be, it doesn't seem to follow any logical order. To overcome this difficulty, the program offers you a Profile Manager, which you can use to select only those categories you really use. Likewise, you can also tick off those specific presets within each category that you know you won't be using often.
Once the output selection process has been conveniently simplified according to your preferences, you can select the video or video files you wish to convert and apply to all of them one of the many output formats provided (regrettably, multiple-output conversion is not supported). You can then select one of your videos and watch them on the program's built-in player, or simply move into the program's editor.
This simple editing tool offers you the possibility of trimming and cropping your videos, of adding text and image/video watermarks to them, editing their background audio, importing a subtitle stream from an SRT or SSA subtitle file, or applying one of the various video effects provided – gauss blur, Laplacian sharpen, aged film (a kind of sepia effect), negative, etc.
In addition, you can preview clips and take snapshots, apply effects, make image adjustments (e.g. brightness, contrast), replace the audio steam, and more.
But you can also make audio and video modifications when it comes to the codec, size, bit rate, frame rate, sample frequency rate, channels and others. Settings can be restored to their default values.
During the conversion job you can check out the progress for the current and total files, elapsed and remaining time, generated and estimated size, as well as a log file. Plus, you can pause the task and enable Pavtube Video Converter to automatically turn off the computer after conversion.
The conversion process itself is fairly fast (thanks to the program's multi-thread support) and doesn't take up much of your system's resources. An attractive and affordable option for those looking for fast and stress-free video conversion processes.
Pros
- The conversion process itself is fairly fast.
- Intuitive and nice-to-look-at interface.
- Batch processing is permitted.
- Includes a useful output profile manager.
- Allows you to add various video effects to your source files.
- Subtitle support.
- Supports nearly all known media file formats.
Cons
- Multiple-output conversion is not supported.