I have Windows 10 32 bit as my old Dell Dimension 9100 that died have Windows XP which I upgraded to Windows 7 32 bit and upgraded to Windows 10 32 bit. Based from what I read from the Forum, Adobe is providing link to customer who requested for Encore so they continue using it as consideration. I chat with customer support directly but said its not their expertise on this matter and refer me to this forum. I'm quite disappointed that they cannot help. I wish they can just said no you can't have it. I just hope somebody from Adobe read my request and be considerate to help. Thanks for your comment fellow adobe users.
I have creative cloud and I installed premiere 2015, I also installed premiere cs6 in order to work with adobe encore but is not working with this new windows 10, is there something I can do to work with encore? or how can I make my menus and DVD's since adobe is not making encore anymore , thank you for any answer in this matter
When I imported a 2 hour video as a new time line, the audio doesn't match the video. I don't understand if it's happening after I export it from premiere or when its being encoded? Also when I try to export it as an mpeg blu ray, encore doesn't like it, so it imports it without the chapter marks.
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As you get more experienced with Encore, your screen will quickly fill with project editing windows. Because the palette windows are useful to have at hand, one way to save space is to drag the Properties palette into a single window with the other four palettes.
Just as DV revolutionised video production for independent freelancers working on small budgets, so the accessibility of DVD is putting high-quality publishing in the hands of more people. Aside from minor player-compatibility issues, media-rot problems, and the on-going format battle, DVD burning is now very much a mainstream phenomenon, and DVD video authoring is a staple part of the DV editing process from the entry level up.
But, in all the time that we've had affordable DVD-R hardware, the only affordable authoring software for professional and commercial projects has been Apple's DVD Studio Pro, leaving Windows-based editors out in the cold unless they want to invest in a Mac. And, while DVD SP was initially awkward and annoying, the newly-released version 2 is a truly wonderful thing. So, Adobe's Encore DVD, the first affordable pro-featured application for Windows, has a lot to live up to.
There is no Mac version of Encore, and that makes sense, as Apple has already muscled Adobe out of the Mac-based video editing market. What's more, Encore is designed to work only under Win XP. Fortunately, though, the program isn't nearly as picky about processors as the recently released Premiere Pro and was happy running on a system using an AMD Athlon Thunderbird CPU.
The retail package consists of an installation disc and a rather lightweight, 155-page, manual. Installation was straightforward, and the program opens with the same sort of empty, cryptic interface that makes programs such as After Effects and Illustrator so intimidating to the novice. At the top left of the screen is a small tool palette similar to Photoshop's, while the bottom right has a properties panel showing off an impressive array of text tools. There are no immediate clues, however, about where to start authoring a DVD!
Conclusion
Encore DVD is well-featured and neatly fills a very obvious gap in the Windows-based authoring market. It's not a difficult program to learn, but suffers from having too many windows and hiding too many of the more fundamental tasks - such as setting end-actions - in menus. Even so, many Windows users will celebrate Encore's arrival.
In a platform-agnostic world, though, we'd still prefer to work with Apple's DVD Studio Pro 2, which offers a considerably more comfortable interface, multi-angle video support and the ability to read DLTs as well as write them.
What Encore DVD doesn't have is direct competition - but the upcoming revision of Ulead's DVD Workshop is sure to keep things developing fast in the Windows arena. If you're tied to Windows and need a professional DVD authoring solution now, opting for Encore makes a lot of sense. But, if things aren't so urgent, keep an eye on the emerging competition - we think that Ulead could make things very exciting.
Adobe Encore provides seriously professional DVD authoring. The built-in menueditor is fully integrated with Photoshop for editing graphics layers, text, andbuttons. The Premiere-like timeline interface supports laying out video clipswith multi-track audio and subtitles. The tabbed windows and palettes provideconvenient access to view and edit the individual DVD components. The navigationcontrols not only provide the ability to specify links to specific buttons on amenu and chapters in a clip, but also support overrides to link together thesame elements in different ways, depending on how the user accesses them.
The Adobe Encore interface is very comfortable for people used to workingwith other Adobe applications, with the Project windows for organizingassets, Editor windows for editing menus and timelines, palettesfor editing object properties, and a small Tools window with editingtools.
The interface also uses tabs to save screen space by nesting multiple windows(and palettes) in a single window frame. You can drag tabs out into a separatewindow to access their contents, drag them back to nest in the window, or closeand reopen them when you need them.
Adobe Encore opens additional windows for editing menus and timelines. The MenuEditor window provides a full built-in editor for designing menus, includingbackgrounds, graphics, text, buttons, and highlights. The Timeline windowprovides a track-based interface for laying out multiple audio and subtitletracks with each video clip. You can work on multiple menus and timelines atonce; both the Menu Editor and Timeline windows also use tabs to organize theopen windows.
Once you have imported your assets, designed your menus, and laid out yourtimelines and tracks, it's time to link them all together to create thenavigation between the different elements of your DVD. As you might expect, youcan easily create links by dragging and dropping elements between the Projectand editor windows. Or you can use the Properties palette to select link targetsfrom a drop-down menu. To change multiple links at once, you can view the menusand buttons in the Menus tab of the Project window, and then set the link in theProperties palette. Adobe Encore includes a built-in Check Links feature toidentify missing links and orphaned assets in your project.
Adobe Encore also provides a very flexible interface for setting objectoptions and properties. You can work directly in the Menu Editor and Timelinewindows, set fields in the Properties palette, or access individual and groupsof assets in the Project windows. The Adobe Encore project management featuresare particularly helpful when working on larger projects. If you are consistentin naming your assets, you can use the Project window tables to sort theelements in your DVD design and review them for inconsistent and missing links.
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