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| Audio/Video Editing and Encoding For all your audio and video editing, encoding/decoding needs. |
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#1 |
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gargouille
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: sector ZZ9 Plural Z Alpha
Posts: 962
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hardware mpeg2 compression /firewire
A friend of mine has bought a DV video camera and wants to make DVDs of his DV cassettes. He owns a FX5900XT Vivo from MSI, which has an "Integrated NTSC/PAL TV encoder"; he can do (with WinDVD) TV capture to MPEG2 in real time.
I have no experience with either mpeg2 hardware, dv cameras and firewire interfaces... Can someone here please answer these questions: 1. does the above mean there is hardware MPEG2 support in the video card? 2. if so, can this hw be used for other inputs than the onboard analog video (Vivo card), e.g. firewire adapter or avi file on hdd? 3. if so, how? ![]() Alternatively, can you suggest a solution (hw+sw) for dv to dvd through firewire? Thanks in advance
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There is a war between the ones who say there is a war and the ones who say there isn't. ~~Leonard Cohen |
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#2 |
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HH's Nokia shareholder!
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DV cams have firewire (4pin) output. So capturin videos form cam can bee done with firewire.
I'm currently doing DVD's form DV cam material I use Sony Vegas to capturing and editing and DVD Architect 4.0 for making DVD's. Basically I recommend that your friend uses some capture software to capture video via firewire to his computer and there edit it and encode it to DVD. Some cameras comes with capture software. But Microsoft's Windows Moviemaker can do the job. Hope this helps.
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#3 |
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DriverHeaven Lover
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Los angeles
Posts: 201
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DV video from camera it's a tranfer media, nothing will be encoded to your computer,
it will be pure digital footage from the original (the dv tape of your friend). It will around 13 gigas per hour of size, and then you need to convert it to mpeg2, wich is the last process to finish to a DVD. you either can use an encoder software like mainconcep, canopus procoder, or use the software that my fellow temeteus82, or use a complete program like ulead dvd workshop , video studio from ulead too. the one that i like it's ulead workshop 2, it's easy and reliable, there are many options to create a dvd shynni dvd from DV material. Also look at this website: www.videohelp.com there you will find a lot of free programs to create dvd's, vcd's, svcd's, and get a lot more information in how to understand and create your own proffetional DVD's , well i hope you enjoy the learning , becouse i did and it's just amayzing
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#4 |
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DriverHeaven Junior Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Nova Scotia, Canada
Posts: 42
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The footage from the DVC will be raw AVI (DV AVI). This is about 14 GBs per hour of footage IIRC. Open the AVI files in VirtualDub, frameserve them to TMPGEnc and encode to MPEG-2 at a bitrate that will allow you to burn your finished project on a DVD+/-R (4.7 GB). Author the DVD as well if you wish with TMPGenc DVD Author or DVDAuthorGUI (freeware).
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