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| Pinnacle Studio Plus Version 12 |
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List Price: $99.99
Our Price: $87.49
You Save: $ 12.50 (13%)
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Pinnacle Systems
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: CD-ROM Brand: Pinnacle Systems EAN: 0613570223115 Feature: Take control of the latest HD video editing technologies, including Blu-ray and AVCHD Format: CD-ROM Is Autographed: 0 Is Memorabilia: 0 Label: Pinnacle Systems Manufacturer: Pinnacle Systems Model: 82101006021 Platform: No Operating System Publisher: Pinnacle Systems Studio: Pinnacle Systems
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Features
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Take control of the latest HD video editing technologies, including Blu-ray and AVCHD Transform your videos and photos into amazing movies New theme-based video editing gives you creative power Share and archive your creations on DVD, YouTube, and more Burn your Hollywood-style movies on DVD and HD DVD format discs on standard DVD media
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Editorial Reviews:
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Make your home movies look great without having to learn a difficult editing program. Combining power and simplicity, Pinnacle Studio Plus version 12 lets you take control of the latest HD video technologies, including Blu-ray and AVCHD. Its Montage theme based editing, designed by professional producers and artists, puts incredible creative power at your fingertips. Simply drag and drop your video and stills to preview your show - and watch your content come alive complete with Hollywood style multi-layered effects, animated graphics, titles and Hi-Fi audio. Edit and polish to your heart's content with the sleek new interface. When you are finished, archive your video memories, publish them on YouTube or enjoy on DVDs and portable devices.
Intel Pentium / AMD Athlon 1.4 GHz or higher (2.4 GHz recommended) Intel Pentium HT / AMD Athlon 2.4 GHz or 1.6 GHz Dual core required for Vista Intel Core 2 Duo 2.4 GHz or higher required for AVCHD editing 512 MB RAM (1 GB recommended) 1 GB required for HD and/or Vista (2 GB recommended) 1.5 GB required for AVCHD (2 GB required on Vista) DirectX 9 or higher graphics card with 64 MB (128 MB recommended) 128 MB required on Vista (256 MB ATI Radeon9600+ or NVIDIA GeForce 6 or higher recommended) 256 MB required for HD & AVCHD editing (ATI Radeon 9600+ or NVIDIA GeForce 6 or higher recommended) DirectX 9 or higher compatible sound card 1 GB of disk space to for installation and 3+ GB to install bonus content DVD-ROM drive to install CD/DVD burner for creating Video CDs, Super Video CDs, DVD, HD DVD & AVCHD discs Blu-Ray burner for BD discs
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| Spotlight customer reviews: |
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Worked flawlessly for me Comment: After downloading trial versions of Cyberlink, Corel and Sony Vegas I decided to go with Pinnacle, in spite of the years of bad press they've recieved on previous versions. You can't download a trial version of Pinnacle Studio 12, but you can see video's on YouTube. I could tell from the videos, that even though this may not be as powerful as the other products, it would be very, very easy to use, and allow me to finally EDIT my family videos from 1984 to the present.
With so much history to catch up on, I really didn't care that I could only have two video tracks instead of 6 or more. I mainly wanted to drag & drop, edit out all the boring stuff, make a nice front end menu with a music soundtrack in addition to the actual video soundtrack, and do it pretty darn fast.
This absolutely met all of my expectations without one glitch.
I got the 'Plus' rather than the 'Ultimate' version. After watching the videos for the three additional features you get with Ultimate, I decided I wouldn't use them for just my family stuff. This has plenty of 'title' animations and video enhancement extras to add quick pizazz.
You can get lost in all the Web reviews and recommendations, especially since for every 'video editor software package' that is 'highly' recommended, you can easily find customers who hate it and had a bad experience. There's no way around that in this day of internet info overload, but don't let it immobilize you. This worked for me, but know that video editing, by nature, simply takes alot of computing power, and that alone, will hang up a good many folks who will then blame the software. (I have a intel quad core with 8GB of ram and 1.5TB of space, running Vista Home Premium 64) I'm sure that helps, but aside from the hardware, I really, really appreciated the simple and straightforward Pinnacle 12 interface. I read no instructions, but did occaisionally check the video tutorial here and there to move forward. Good luck
Customer Rating:      Summary: AVCHD? AVC H.264 (MP4)? Not My Favorite interface but IT WORKS for BOTH! Comment: Although I do not LOVE Pinnacle Studio Plus 12, I give it high marks because most importantly...IT WORKS! Admittedly, I am a big fan of Adobe Premier Elements...primarily because of their GUI (graphical user interface, i.e...look and feel). I used Adobe PE3 and PE4 without problems using footage from my Sanyo Xacti 720p camcorder (avc H.264 MP4 files)but Adobe PE7 gave these formats a real fit...even worse, not enough time for a fit...just a big CRASH! Adobe PE7 however did handle AVCHD .mts 1080p footage from a friend's Canon HF10 without problems, in fact it was flawless. OK, now back to the Pinnacle Studio Plus 12 program...anytime I had problems with other programs Pinnacle always handled things well, actually VERY well. That goes for both formats avc H.264 MP4 and the latest and greatest avchd .mts (again from a Canon HF10 and SDHC card) I would give Pinnacle a 5 star if it only had a better user interface but hey, it works very well and there is a lot to say about that! By the way, I have a Dell Inspiron 530 desktop running Vista Basic with a 1.60Ghz Celeron processor and 4GB or ram.
Customer Rating:      Summary: much better now... Comment: I purchased this as an upgrade to version 10 (which I have enjoyed for several years).
I should say that I have not used any of the big competators. I have heard alot of nay-saying about Pinnacle, and I would not recommend it for the tech-less. Studio seems to be a strong product for those with strong computers and people who enjoy a challenge. If occasional software crashing and custom configuration are not your thing - go with Adobe Premeire Elements (or even worse - go with a mac - ha ha).
At first I was wildly disappointed with version 12 as it worked really slowly. My computer has great specs, so I figured it was something wrong with the configuration - or worse - the software itself. After trying all Pinnacle's recommendations (even reconfiguring my nVidia 8800 and turning off my second monitor), I found that by working from video files that have been stored on a different drive than the one Studio runs on, it ran great. Maybe the problem comes from my main drive being a RAID system (data striping) which is fast but a little unusual. I don't know. But by putting my video on a different (albeit slower) drive (external), 12 runs smoothly now. I can't say if the program is really that much better than 10 - maybe some of the HD features will be worth it. I am still in the process of buying an HD camera.
As for the critics of BluRay support - I can't spea. As for AVCHD - you should know going in that you are a crazy "early adopter" and should expect problems with hardware and software alike. The reports on AVCHD are pretty grim across the board. Most techies seem to think AVCHD is still a ways off. I will be going with HDV (I hope) when I make the switch to HD.
I should note that using an external drive for video has lots of advantages anyway - so I can't complain about my adjustment, however depending on how you format the external drive you might have trouble with big files (greater than 4 GB). I'll leave that challenge up to you (ha ha). There is an elegant solution.
I did not opt for the Ulitmate version which is exactly the same as "Plus" except for the three after market features (which can be purchased as an upgrade from the Pinnacle site for 30 bucks). I may eventually go for this upgrade, but other than the sparkly transition, I don't see how they are worth the extra $.
You should get the free cartoon fx from BlueFX which can be downloaded from thier site. I have also purchased additional FX from BlueFX and love them. You can get them through Studio. Buying them directly from BlueFX is expensive and usually you are restricted to purchasing big collections for 100s.
good luck.
Customer Rating:      Summary: best Windows app for HD video editing Comment: A few months ago I purchased my first HD digital camcorder (Sanyo Xacti HD1000). I soon set about trying to figure out which editing software application to use with all the AVCHD footage I created. I tried the software bundled w/ my camera (uLead 11) as well as trial versions of any of the other products I could get my hands on (Sony Vegas 8, Adobe Premiere Elements 7).
Adobe Premiere still doesn't handle AVC/H264 footage natively and I found the interfaces of uLead and Sony Vegas in particular hard to use. I also found Vegas more prone to hanging/crashing even on my relatively powerful machine (see below). So I decided to buy Pinnacle Studio 12 sight unseen (no downloadable trial) and have been very pleased ever since. Pinnacle is the consumer arm of Avid, the gold standard for digital editing in Hollywood, and it seems technology trickle down really works.
Pinnacle Studio handles AVCHD footage natively and lets you create and edit projects in any format ranging from low resolutions to 1920x1080 60i frame rate. You can output to files or discs including standard DVD, Blu-Ray, HD-DVD, and AVCHD disc (burned on DVD media, playable in most Blu-Ray players). The burning software is integrated in the package and not separate as w/ uLead and other apps.
Overall I find the Pinnacle Studio interface to be the easiest to use as well, this side of Apple iMovie. I'd never owned a camcorder before this and hadn't really edited video or created DVDs before and I was able to create a 30min DVD from 2hrs of footage that I shot that I'm very pleased with.
The only caveats I would include are 1) editing HD footage natively in Pinnacle Studio (or any app) requires powerful hardware. I ended up getting a new desktop to do video editing among other things and am running a quad-core 2.6Ghz Intel 9300 processor w/ 8GB of memory. There are settings you can vary within Studio 12 to suit your hardware, i.e. not doing full-screen previewing, memory cache sizes, etc. The second caveat is that unfortunately Avid/Pinnacle don't offer a trial version of the software for consumers to really see how good it is. So you have to take the word of reviewers like me.
Overall highly recommended. Best Windows app for HD video editing out there in my opinion, having tried all the rest.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Disappointed with AVCHD / BluRay capabilities Comment: I used this software back when it was at Versions 7 and 8, and switched to Ulead's VideoStudio because I found it to be less crash-prone. Now that I'd purcahsed an AVCHD videocamera and wanted to author BluRay discs in AVC format (which VideoStudio 11.5 cannot do), I thought I'd give Studio another try. First, understand that AVCHD editing requires a very powerful computer with this software. My Core 2 Duo 2.4 GHZ with 4GB RAM was barely up to the task, and even then Studio would frequently hang if I tried to move too quickly from one task to another. However, despite numerous tries, I could not get this software to successfully burn a BluRay of my finished project. I could get as far as encoding the final movie, which is the hard part, but the software seemed to have some kind of bug that resulted in an unuseable BluRay image every time I tried.
Normally, I would not go to the trouble of posting a review concerning an issue that I thought might be isolated or due to my particular hardware setup. But in this case, after spending hours on the Pinnacle Support forums, I think these problems aren't isolated and that there is a significant number of Studio 12 users who are having problems with BluRay burning and AVCHD editing. Moreover, I downloaded the trial version of Sony's Vegas Pro 8 and had no problems with it whatsoever - It ran slowly to be sure, but it was reliable and produced a perfect BluRay disc.
My advice is to check Pinnacle's support forums before purchasing and see if others are still having issues. I'm sure Pinnacle is working on it and will try to address problems with a future patch, but right now I found this software to be completely useless for my intended purpose.
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