AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: MD: off topic: video cd
It sounds like your big problem is drive space. I'm not sure about the
details of your problem, but adding a hard drive is simple. $99 would buy
at least 15 gigs (that's a guess) at CompUSA or (God forbid) Best Buy. If
you hav
>> On 17 Apr 2001, at 18:30, Nathan White wrote:
>>
>> My question is weather it is possible to record a Video CD
>> in real-time with my cd burner using my video cards 'video in' port.
>
> From my knowledge of VCDs, no, as you'd have to capture the
> video, then encode it to MPEG-1, then burn
It sounds like your big problem is drive space. I'm not sure about the
details of your problem, but adding a hard drive is simple. $99 would buy
at least 15 gigs (that's a guess) at CompUSA or (God forbid) Best Buy. If
you have a free IDE on your machine, you might strongly consider it.
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While it would be nice (if you had a machine po
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On 17 Apr 2001, at 18:30, Nathan White wrote:
I"m not quite sure what you're asking. But let me try,
What kind of video card you have? Does it support real time MPEG1 encoding?
If not, try to record to AVI using Indeo 5, 352x240, 30 frame per second,
stereo/16bit/44khz. Then download a free MPEG1 encoder (BBMPEG, Panasonic
Mpeg Encoder) to