Hallo

> I'm rendering an animation that will eventually be displayed on a 16:9
> screen that has a resolution of 1024x768.  In order for this to look
> right, it seems I need to render my animation in a different resolution
> (on the PC), and then scale it to 1024x768 so that it will display right
> on a 16:9 screen.  However, I am utterly confused as to how to do this
> calculation.  Anyway know?
Just as Steven said ;)
You have to use very likely the --no-constraints option. Else mpeg2enc
does not encode at a higher resolution than 720x576, and only up to
bitrates of 10MBit.

> Yes, it's a really wierd system.  It's a computer monitor that runs at
> 1024x768, but the actual screen dimensions are 16:9, meaning that the
> pixel aspect ratio is really screwy, especially for a computer monitor.
> The video is going to be played from an MPEG file on the computer by
> Windows Media Player.
If you have to play it back with that player you have to use a MPEG1
Video, and cannot use MPEG2 which works better (smaler files) for high
resolutions. Or use some other player that can playback MPEG2
(DVD-Player SW, or VLC for example)


auf hoffentlich bald,

Berni the Chaos of Woodquarter

Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
www: http://www.lysator.liu.se/~gz/bernhard


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