When i make a video or data DVD of the already filmed scenes in the Handy-cam or from the files stored in the computer by the SONY PMB software i notice a considerable degradation in the video quality of the DVD. Actually the sony PMB lets you make a DVD only in SD (standard definition) while i need it to be the same quality if better is not possible.
- How to get the lcd tv logo off a samsung tv?
- “Custom” Semi Truck Sleeper Interior
- McFly RadioActive Tour HD – The Last Song
- is the samsung projection television sp42q2hl1 hd ready?
- Hak5 – Homebrew Multitouch
- How could I rotate an HD video without degrading the quality?
- Gül?en – Sözde Ayr?l?k – (HD)
- Cobra 29 LX LE 50th Anniversary Edition Review by CBRadioMagazine
- Ekstasis Kaf – Besame ( Official Video HD)
- | CODUL LUI ORESTE | 11.IUN.2011 | ANTENA 2 HD | LIVE

Well,Moyea Video Converter for Mac can do a good job for you.
If you need more useful info. just click here
http://www.download3000.com/download_47903.html
Good luck!
The Sony DCR-SR47 is a standard definition video, internal hard disc drive based, consumer grade camcorder.
Don’t use "Picture Motion Browser" as a first step.
Here is how I would deal with that highly compressed video…
First, the camcorder should be captiuring in highest quality mode. To transfer the video to a computer, connect with a USB cable and copy the mpg files to the computer. Convert the files using MPEG StreamClip
http://www.squared5.com/
to a file type your computer based video editor can deal with. MovieMaker prefers WMV or AVI files. Less compression is better. When the conversion is done, quit MPEG StreamClip and launch your video edito. Drag the converted files to the video storage, Capture or timeline areas of the video editor. Export of save the video project as a low-compression WMV or AVI. MovieMaker is not very good, but likely what we have to work with unless you want to invest in some software (like Sony Vegas).
Get a DVD authoring tool – like WinDVD to render the DVD-readable disc…
If you are committed to making only data DVDs, then you should probably stay in the AVI file format – but keep the compression to a minimum. More compression = more discarded data = reduced video quality.
Good luck.