Audio off after burning

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Guest

I am pretty new at this. My movie on Moviemaker will turn out great and
playback fine on my computer. Then I will burn it to DVD using Sonic MyDVD
and the audio will be a fraction off the video. Sonic can't seem to help me.
Any ideas?
 
Do you have any still images? If so see this previous reply

"I have seen this bug before with some DVD authoring applications, and it
seems to be caused by the fact that the image doesn't change for a whole
bunch of frames in the video. The workaround is to add the Ease In or the
Ease Out effect to each of your pictures. This
will cause the frames to change and you should no longer see the problem."

Regards
Dean Rowe
This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.
 
I will try that. Others have suggested I need to save the movie as dv-avi
and that should solve it. The only problem is that I apparently don't have
enough space on my hard drive. I have tried cleaning up, but still can't save
that way. Short of additionaly memory - any other suggestions?
 
Hi everyone, I'm very new to this as well. For some reason, my browser won't
let me post a new question (even though I've turned off all pop-up blockers),
so I hope that you won't mind me replying to a similar topic (which appears
to be from 2004). I found your information interesting.

My question relates to audio as well. I use version 5.1 I can start with a
source video that has excellent audio fidelity, but when I import it into
Windows MovieMaker, the audio suddenly becomes very bad. When I say this, I
mean that it is loaded with high-frequency aliasing characteristic of
low-quality codec sound. This persists when I "finish" the movie. It
persists no matter what formats I've tried for importing and saving the
source and the finished product. I can't seem to find any settings that
relate to importing audio along with a movie (like how much compression is
applied). I'm a pianist, so when I upload my performances to Youtube, I want
my audio to be the best it can be. It's so frustrating not knowing how to
get past the terible aliasing that presents itself whenever I bring my videos
into Movie Maker. In short, what's up with the audio in Windows Movie Maker
5.1???

Thank you for your time.
 
Jessica said:
Hi everyone, I'm very new to this as well. For some reason, my
browser won't let me post a new question (even though I've turned off
all pop-up blockers), so I hope that you won't mind me replying to a
similar topic (which appears to be from 2004). I found your
information interesting.

My question relates to audio as well. I use version 5.1 I can start
with a source video that has excellent audio fidelity, but when I
import it into Windows MovieMaker, the audio suddenly becomes very
bad. When I say this, I mean that it is loaded with high-frequency
aliasing characteristic of low-quality codec sound. This persists
when I "finish" the movie. It persists no matter what formats I've
tried for importing and saving the source and the finished product.
I can't seem to find any settings that relate to importing audio
along with a movie (like how much compression is applied). I'm a
pianist, so when I upload my performances to Youtube, I want my audio
to be the best it can be. It's so frustrating not knowing how to get
past the terible aliasing that presents itself whenever I bring my
videos into Movie Maker. In short, what's up with the audio in
Windows Movie Maker
5.1???

Thank you for your time.
============================
I suspect it's a compatibility issue...
what is the format of the sound file?

--

J. Inzer MS-MVP
Digital Media Experience

Notice
This is not tech support
I am a volunteer

Solutions that work for
me may not work for you

Proceed at your own risk
 
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