DJ Marco : I agree except that if the queue point is not set exactly where one wants it, deleting it and starting fresh is easier than trying to move it.
Even though storage media is incredibly inexpensive nowadays, native .vob/.mpg files are huge. Removing even 1 minute of extraneous unwanted footage from one file can save 10mb-15mb of drive space. When the video library reaches 4,000 tracks, a couple hundred of these videos with undesirable beginnings or endings (queue points do not address where to stop a file) can equate to several gigs of wasted space.
Yes, it is tons of extra labor, but by using the Sony Vegas or TMPEG Express programs, all the unneeded beginnings or endings can be physically trimmed and removed, right down to the perfect track beginning beat.
Queue points rely on a database to store the information. Lose the data base for any reason and those queue points are history too. By altering/editing the physical file, the possibility of data base corruption becomes a non-issue...forever.