![]() This H.264 format is becoming the standard for flash and hard disk-based DV cameras, so being able to squirt footage directly onto high-definition disks is great. You'll only get about 20 minutes of footage on the disc, but for family holiday videos and showreels, that's enough.Įven more welcome is the ability to burn straight from camcorders that save footage in the new AVCHD format. Blu-ray burners are, of course, relatively rare and expensive, but Toast can 'fake' Blu-ray and HD-DVD on standard DVDs. While the previous incarnation boasted the ability to burn data to the new high-capacity discs, Toast 9 can burn high-definition video to the now-dominant Blu-ray format or HD-DVD.Īt least, it can courtesy of an optional plug-in if you want this ability, you'll have to shell out another £15. Particularly welcome are the floating tooltips that give some useful information about each format, and the ability to hide legacy formats such as Video CD and SVCD and, if you don't have a high-definition burner, one or both of the high-def formats, HD-DVD and Blu-ray.Īh yes, HD. ![]() There are other little usability and cosmetic tweaks. One nice touch is the ability to preview the settings you apply when creating customised export presets, just by rendering a few seconds of video for playback. While this ability to transcode video files and prepare them for devices such as the iPod, iPhone and Apple TV existed in version 8, a dedicated tab is handy.Įxports take advantage of Elgato's Turbo.264 hardware encoder dongle if you have one plugged in. ![]() A new tab has joined the Data, Audio, Video and Copy options, called Convert.
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