Apple bought Astarte's DVDirector in 2000, re-releasing it as DVD Studio Pro in 2001. Version 1.5, still based on this original code, was released in April 2002. In the meantime Apple had acquired Spruce Technologies in 2001, and was retooling the DVD authoring package that came with that acquisition (DVD Maestro). In August 2003, Apple released DVD Studio Pro 2, with a new interface. DVD Studio Pro 3 was released in 2004. In April 2005, Apple updated DVD Studio Pro to support authoring HD content. DVD Studio Pro 4 allowed for the burning of
HD DVD content to both standard DVDs and HD DVD media (even though no HD DVD burners were available for Macintosh). For playing back HD DVD content burned to a standard DVD, Apple requires a
PowerPC G5, Apple
DVD Player v4.6, and
Mac OS X v10.4 or later. Version 4 was the first version to drop support for
Mac OS 9. In January 2006, Apple stopped offering DVD Studio Pro as a stand-alone product, selling it only as part of the
Final Cut Studio suite. The 4.0.3 update, released in the same month, upgrades the program to the finalized
HD DVD 1.0 specification. It also supports the native H.264 specification. The 4.2 update, which shipped with the
Final Cut Studio 2 release, was simply a compatibility update and did not add any major new features. ==Features==