On Mon, 4 Oct 2004, Roman Shaposhnick wrote:
> Personally, I use DV for that.
I concur. (as an aside I have recently viewed the SVCD/VCDs I made
using a Bt878 card vs the discs I made after switching to DV - oh
my goodness the quality took a quantum leap upward!).
On Tue, Oct 05, 2004 at 02:57:55AM +0200, Martin Samuelsson wrote:
> On Tuesday 05 October 2004 02:02, Steven M. Schultz wrote:
> > Most TV shows are in increments of 30 minutes. At 25 fps that's 45000
> > frames. Store the data in 45000 frame files. When it comes time to
> > age the
On Tuesday 05 October 2004 02:02, Steven M. Schultz wrote:
> On Tue, 5 Oct 2004, Martin Samuelsson wrote:
> What a word! But yes, that's better than streamable :-)
Mmm, words. They are fun to play with. :)
> Circular files. Not sure if they're well suited to video processing.
I don
On Tue, 5 Oct 2004, Martin Samuelsson wrote:
> Ok, sequentialable format, then. :)
What a word! But yes, that's better than streamable :-)
> Streaming to me means a format you can tap into anywhere and begin playing at
Oh, that's seekable or random accessible. I've s
On Tuesday 05 October 2004 00:51, Steven M. Schultz wrote:
> > I think it's a pity lavtools doesn't support any easily streamable
> > format. That would make building timeshifters easier.
>
> I'm confused (or missing something ;)). How does 'streaming' make
> 'timeshifting' easier? S
On Mon, 4 Oct 2004, Martin Samuelsson wrote:
> On Monday 04 October 2004 17:11, Richard Ellis wrote:
> > would then work with the file. However, they are not totally happy
> > with the "fix", they seem to read the whole entire file from disk
> > first before doing anything at all with it. But a
On Monday 04 October 2004 17:11, Richard Ellis wrote:
> Manually fixing it was the only way I ever found to correct this
> problem when it happened to me. If I remember right, if I copied the
> first 2k from a good avi (that also had the same recording settings)
> over top of the first 2k of the b
On Sun, Oct 03, 2004 at 02:23:32PM +0200, Martin Samuelsson wrote:
> Once in a while, my video computer die from a kernel panic. If this
> happens while I'm recording something (which it normally does), I'm
> left with an avi file with no usable values in the header.
>
> Is there any good way to f