I'm relatively new to PowerDirector - just bought PD 14 about one week ago, after testing the trial for some days. I'm using the latest version 14.0.2820.0 on Windows 10 64 bit.
I think it's an amazing prosumer video editor... I won't go into how many things it does better than the competition. But now that I started using it "for real", I've realised I have a serious problem: any audio track's waveform is displayed in a blocky way, with almost no detail and -worse still- with silence being barely discernable from audible parts, which makes "visual" edition very difficult or impossible for me, since I rely heavily on the physical shape of waveforms to make cuts, remove some parts, identify words, silence, breathing or mouse sounds, etc. (I make tutorials, reviews etc. with a strong voice-over component).
At first I thought I was dealing with a bad audio file, but after some testing, I've realised it happens with absolutely any audio file. And to my surprise, I ended up finding this thread:
http://forum.cyberlink.com/forum/posts/list/47801.page;jsessionid=6B68F3B74BAED045ADD387096A35156F
According to that thread, blocky and almost unreadable waveforms are standard for PowerDirector... but I just can't believe that. In any other video editor I've used, waveforms were easily recognisable - there were differences, but I never found this kind of "pixel-art" version of a waveform.
I can't remember if this was already happening when I tested the trial (for a few days). If it did, it's really odd that I didn't notice straight away - but then again, maybe I was more focused on things like transitions, real time preview speed, producing quality and efficiency, etc.
I'm attaching my dxdiag results (just in case), and here I've uploaded some screen captures showing the same waveform in different video editors:
Camtasia - Filmora - Vegas - Hitfilm - PowerDirector14
As I said, some are better than others, but all of them (but PD) make silence/audio easily recognizable. In fact, please note that the PowerDirector capture I'm attaching here is not so bad, because in these screenshots I've used a test audio file that has already been normalized (so there is more visual difference between sound and silence), but yesterday I tried to do some "real" voice over straight from PowerDirector, and after recording, it was almost impossible to identify the parts where I was speaking or silent.
So, in short... Is it really like that? Have I just bought some useless software (for my specific needs, given I need reasonably accurate waveforms in audio tracks)? Is really PowerDirector's graphic waveform display so poor?
Any help will be really appreciated, even if it's just to confirm that I threw away my money. Don't get me wrong: again, I *love* PD for so many reasons, and I was so happy to finally find the perfect prosumer editor after trying so many these years... but I can't work around this specific flaw.
Sorry for the long explanation. I will start investigating about CyberLink's refund policy, just in case I have some remote chance to get my money back if my suspicions are confirmed...
Thanks.
[I've removed the DxDiag.txt subsequently]
This message was edited 4 times. Last update was at Aug 31. 2016 07:35