Am Mittwoch 08 März 2006 08.08 schrieb Florin Andrei: > On Wed, 2006-03-01 at 14:09 -0500, Jerome Cornet wrote: > > > yuvmotionfps interpolates the motion of blocks withing the image rather > > than doing a simple temporal averaging of the entire frame. > > This allows a very smooth motion of the objects without blurring or > > other effects. > > I've described the process in more details (with stick figure drawings) at: > > http://jcornet.free.fr/linux/yuvmotionfps.html > > Awesome! That is very nice and clever! > > I was just complaining recently to a friend that there is no open source > tool (that I know of) that can change FPS using motion interpolation. > > It would be great to include that in mjpegtools. > I have a problem which seems to be closely related. I got a bunch of very old 8mm films shot at 16 fps. They are now copied to (analog) interlaced PAL with 25 fps (more precisely, 24 fps) by copying every original frame to 1 frame plus one field. I would greatly appreciate if I could get a tool which "interpolates" the middle frame between two adjacent frames.
Michael PS. Is there a tool available which makes a high-quality movie looking as grainy as an old 8mm film? M. ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by xPML, a groundbreaking scripting language that extends applications into web and mobile media. Attend the live webcast and join the prime developer group breaking into this new coding territory! http://sel.as-us.falkag.net/sel?cmd=lnk&kid0944&bid$1720&dat1642 _______________________________________________ Mjpeg-users mailing list Mjpeg-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/mjpeg-users