>> Somehow, the latest/current lavplay (and thus glav) works on my machine,
>> at least on the one NTSC "dv2" format AVI I use for testing stuff (only
>> one I tried).
>
>interesting... how did you get this dv2 avi? with dvgrab?
Yes, dvgrab... (from two years ago, probably. !)
-matt m.
On Mon, Feb 09, 2004 at 04:39:20PM -0500, Richard Ellis wrote:
> Where/what is introducing the subtitles into the video? Are you
> using some tool to "write" the subtitles on each video frame before
> it gets coded by the mpeg encoder? Or are the subtitles generated by
> the DVD player from the D
> No bites at all... *sigh*
>
> Let me ask mor simply then. Is there a way to get yuvscaler
> or some other tool to add black bars to the sides of stream?
>
>
> On Sun, Feb 08, 2004 at 03:31:51PM -0500, Paul Miller wrote:
> > Is there some trick I can use to fool my DVD player into
> > clippin
> That's what *I* thought, too. (Which is why I've ignored it for 2+ years.)
>
> Somehow, the latest/current lavplay (and thus glav) works on my machine,
> at least on the one NTSC "dv2" format AVI I use for testing stuff (only
> one I tried).
interesting... how did you get this dv2 avi? with
Hi, Paul,
>I'm not having a problem with the tools per se, but a
>problem with my DVD player. I need to fool it. Question
>below code.
...
>The problem is, my DVD player cuts off 10 or so pixels from
>each side, and 15 or so from the top and bottom. When I try
>to play the VCD it render
>
> The problem is, my DVD player cuts off 10 or so pixels from
> each side, and 15 or so from the top and bottom. When I try
> to play the VCD it renders some of the subtitles off the
> screen -- not to mention some of the video.
Are you certain it's the DVD player? It sounds like you are
witn
No bites at all... *sigh*
Let me ask mor simply then. Is there a way to get yuvscaler
or some other tool to add black bars to the sides of stream?
On Sun, Feb 08, 2004 at 03:31:51PM -0500, Paul Miller wrote:
> Is there some trick I can use to fool my DVD player into
> clipping less of my video;
On Mon, 9 Feb 2004, [ISO-8859-1] Thomas Börkel wrote:
> As I wrote in another thread: I have a still example, I think, for that
> problem: http://www.boerkel.de/q.zip
Initially, to me, that just looks like a variation on the grey
blocks/splotches that always seem appear during d
[lazily catching up on a weekend's email... easy ones first...]
>On Fri, 2004-02-06 at 02:16, Maarten De Boer wrote:
>> lavplay file.avi
>> only output a plain green screen. but
...
>> the avi file has been recorded with dvgrab --format dv2
>
>lavplay doesn't support DV.
>
>Ronald
That'
On Mon, 9 Feb 2004, Dragon_at_work wrote:
> On Monday 09 February 2004 02:57, Steven M. Schultz wrote:
> > system - when a program asks for 1 second it can be a tick or two
> > of the clock off.
> I was afraid of that
UNIX 101 - sleep(1) is not guaranteed to be exactly 1 secon
Hi,
I have now experimented a lot. The results were rather surprising for me.
I am using the edit tab of LVS only because my hardware is much to slow for
capturing in the GUI.
Here is what I got in the edit tab:
- With all the video extensions loaded into the xserver: Playing the video
gives o
On Monday 09 February 2004 03:20, you wrote:
> Do you thin the -O|--sync-offset option would also to the job ? -O 2s
> should make a 2 sec offset.
I am not sure it would work as each amalgamation/concatenation introduces the
same error. Because there are AVIs intermingled with the (silent) JPEGs,
On Monday 09 February 2004 02:57, Steven M. Schultz wrote:
> system - when a program asks for 1 second it can be a tick or two
> of the clock off.
I was afraid of that
> dd if=/dev/zero of=1sec-silence.pcm bs=17600 count=10
Great! This worked perfectly!
Thanks for your keen
HI!
Ray Cole wrote:
I realize a sample would be worth 1GB words...but unless I pop the old processor back in place (which I hate doing because the CPU fan is so darn difficult to get off/on...I hate the clip on it...) I don't think I'm going to be able to reproduce it.
As I wrote in another threa
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