Evereddie wrote:
The things that Opus does will never be possible on a Video DVD, unless the medium itself is re-done.
Well - yes and no!
- If you're comparing the full range of what Opus can do against template-based DVD authoring software, then YES I agree.
- But if you're comparing what many people use Opus for (glorified Powerpoint stuff) against DVD authoring software that can directly access the underlying Virtual Machine script stuff that makes DVD tick, in many cases the answer will be NO.
Evereddie wrote:
This is mostly due to the fact that a DVD player is not a computer and can not process what is needed to interact like a computer does.
Strictly speaking a DVD player really
is a "computer", albeit with a very specialised and limited set of commands - but let's not get bogged down on semantics.
The problem is that most low-cost DVD authoring software forces you into a limited box - a template-based solution, with maybe one standard structure for your finished DVD - one size fits all.
So, if you find a piece of software that doesn't impose these restrictions, and also apply a good amount of lateral thinking to what you're trying to achieve, you may well find that you can do much more with DVD than you first imagined. For example, random selection is possible, and I can think of a way you could even do elementary scoring - of course nothing would be written for posterity, but you would still be able to give immediate score feedback to the viewer. The commands are easy enough to research, but you'll understand if I don't blurt out the lateral thinking processes!
The major limitation with DVD remains resolution - you are ultimately tied to PAL (or NTSC) screen resolutions, and as Linda rightly points out above you will never be able to display detailed documents this way.
Rob Kirkwood
www.visibleform.co.uk