On Thu, 17 Mar 2005, Steven Boswell II wrote:
As soon as I get mjpegtools' video quality up to
my standards (and I'm getting REALLY close), I
plan for my next obsession to be bringing
open-source video editing up to snuff. I know of
kino, lvs, cinelerra, and hvirtual, but haven't
looked too de
Hi Brannon,
On Wed, 2005-03-02 at 18:46, Brannon Klopfer wrote:
> Running X with the "nvidia" drivers, I must start xawtv with "-noxv" or
> "-noxv-video." - with the "nv" drivers, I do not need to do this. When
> fullscreen mode is on, I only get video in a portion of the screen - is
> there an
>I'm also developing an obsession for open source
>video processing. I develop scripts (and
>graphical wizards to control/run them, for
>inexprienced/lazy users) that push the limits of
>the current state of Linux video processing
>tools.
Ah, cool! That wasn't the direction I was
planning to tak
>So, basically you are suggesting classical
>timeline editing with addition of hierarchial
>grouping of video fragments and transition
>effects?
I guess so. I don't know all the video-editing
terminology yet. :-)
Being able to treat video production as a bunch of
independent but combinable part
I need to create a Window Media Player compliant avi file from jpeg images on
Windows.
I'm using 1.6.2 mjpetools compiled under cygwin.
I used a command like this as suggested on mjpeghowto manual
jpeg2yuv.exe -v 0 -f 25 -I p -j e:\temp\fra_%%04d.jpg | yuv2lav.exe -v 2 -b
1000 -q 100 -f A -o exam