Re: [gentoo-user] determining length of MPEG video
I wanted to ask if this program can rip a DVD from a CDRW drive, or do you have to use a DVD drive? (Some of the PC ones will, I think.) This is technically impossible. A DVD is a different type of disc. A cd-rw cannot read a DVD unless it is some sort of DVD/cd-rw. The reason is simply that a DVD uses a much finer laser, I want to say something like a tenth the size. This is why it can also read cds. The theory of a cd and DVD is more or less the same I believe, its just the size of laser. However at one point they stopped producing even CD-RW/DVD drivers because the laser was so small it couldn't realiably write a cd. Too easy for it to jitter I believe. -- Christopher In 1968 it took the computing power of 2 C-64's to fly a rocket to the moon. Now, in 1998 it takes the Power of a Pentium 200 to run Microsoft Windows 95. Something must have gone wrong. -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] determining length of MPEG video
On Sun, 2003-08-24 at 15:13, Andrew Gaffney wrote: I used dvd::rip to rip a DVD. It split it into the audio and video streams. When it used transcode to combine them, the audio was out of sync with the video. I opened the audio stream (.mpa) in xmms. It said it was 149:23. How can I determine the length of the video stream (.m1v)? And once they are verified to be the same length, how should i go about combining them into a VCD-ready MPEG? There are messages in the dvd::rip archives about AC3 passthrough causing sync problems. I have a feeling that list would get you an answer much faster. I wanted to ask if this program can rip a DVD from a CDRW drive, or do you have to use a DVD drive? (Some of the PC ones will, I think.) Thanks, Mark -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] determining length of MPEG video
Mark Knecht wrote: On Sun, 2003-08-24 at 15:13, Andrew Gaffney wrote: I used dvd::rip to rip a DVD. It split it into the audio and video streams. When it used transcode to combine them, the audio was out of sync with the video. I opened the audio stream (.mpa) in xmms. It said it was 149:23. How can I determine the length of the video stream (.m1v)? And once they are verified to be the same length, how should i go about combining them into a VCD-ready MPEG? There are messages in the dvd::rip archives about AC3 passthrough causing sync problems. I have a feeling that list would get you an answer much faster. I wanted to ask if this program can rip a DVD from a CDRW drive, or do you have to use a DVD drive? (Some of the PC ones will, I think.) I have a DVD-ROM. I was thinking about something else. Mplayer has support for outputting to a MPEG-PES audio or video stream. Is there a way to have MPlayer read both streams at once and output them into one file? -- Andrew Gaffney -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list