First, i misspelled, it's the colr atom, (and the gama atom)
clap stands for clean aperture.
I have no clue why that should be an issue. It has nothing to do with the actual resolution of a file.
For the colr ad the OP, It's QuickTime that could mess things up with older versions of Avid.
Since Quicktime player / the framework is long dead, it 'should' not be an issue anymore.
I don't feel like pursuing this further unless someone sponsors it, as I don't think it will be of any use for the vast majority.
Bouke
On 20 Mar 2023, at 02:43, John Moore <bigfish@pacbell.net> wrote:Is this "clrn" in any way related to the "Clap Atom" Netflix has mentioned?
From Netflix:
JES Extensifier - Netflix | Partner Help Center
netflixstudios.comhttps://partnerhelp.netflixstudios.com › en-us › articlesJES Extensifier allows you to adjust a number of atoms within Quicktime MOV files. Quickly remove the Clean Aperture (CLAP) atom with a few clicks and ..."
I have updated my steam driven edit system to squirrels running spinning cages given all the power outages with the recent California rains it seemed the way to go. Would something like a second of smpte bars exported in a DNxHR .mov with legal level and then full range checked be of any use in your examination? I could go buy some squirrel treats and crank those out. ;-)
No comments:
Post a Comment