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 ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by OSDN's Audience Survey. Help shape OSDN's sites and tell us what you think. Take this five minute survey and you could win a $250 Gift Certificate. http://www.wrgsurveys.com/2003/osdntech03.php?site=8 _______________________________________________ Mjpeg-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/mjpeg-users