
Hi First off, welcome to 2005. Next, has anybody had any fun converting media in Linux (or W32 for that matter)? I have several AVi files (in DV1 format) that have been ripped from my old and dying camera and I have now many Gigs of AVIs I would like to make into MPEGs or similar, if for no reason other than to reduce thier size. I have tried some W32 applications that do not preserve the quality or even the size of the videos and after a few weeks, I have come to the conclusion, that not even paid for software is good for me. Any ideas for Linux or W32 greatly appreciated. Rgds Gund

I have only used one program to accomplish this in the past, unfortunately it is only available for w32 - although it is open source. Virtual Dub (http://www.virtualdub.org/) does the trick nicely, although it can be complicated, less than user friendly and with allot of options. Basically though, you want to get the xvid codec, and some form of mp3 or ogg codec - then trans code the file from the uncompressed avi files that you will have gotten from your camera, to files with xvid compression (open an avi file in virtual dub, choose video->compression and choose the xvid codec and options, then audo->compression and choose your ogg/mp3 codec then choose file-save as avi and it begins compressing). (There are plenty of other codecs, but xvid is an excellent open one that can challenge the paid codecs). Another option would be to pay for a piece of software like Dr. Divx, which automagically will transcode into divx files. Just Ideas. Gund Wehsling wrote:
Hi
First off, welcome to 2005.
Next, has anybody had any fun converting media in Linux (or W32 for that matter)? I have several AVi files (in DV1 format) that have been ripped from my old and dying camera and I have now many Gigs of AVIs I would like to make into MPEGs or similar, if for no reason other than to reduce thier size.
I have tried some W32 applications that do not preserve the quality or even the size of the videos and after a few weeks, I have come to the conclusion, that not even paid for software is good for me.
Any ideas for Linux or W32 greatly appreciated.
Rgds
Gund

Next, has anybody had any fun converting media in Linux (or W32 for that matter)? I have several AVi files (in DV1 format) that have been ripped from my old and dying camera and I have now many Gigs of AVIs I would like to make into MPEGs or similar, if for no reason other than to reduce thier size.
Any ideas for Linux or W32 greatly appreciated.
There is the package 'transcode' under linux, although I've never used it myself.

Daniel Lawson wrote:
Next, has anybody had any fun converting media in Linux (or W32 for that matter)? I have several AVi files (in DV1 format) that have been ripped from my old and dying camera and I have now many Gigs of AVIs I would like to make into MPEGs or similar, if for no reason other than to reduce thier size.
Any ideas for Linux or W32 greatly appreciated.
There is the package 'transcode' under linux, although I've never used it myself.
Also, mencode from the mplayer project allows nice transcoding under Linux from/to pretty much any combination of formats you might care about.

On Tue, 2005-01-11 at 14:48 +1300, Daniel Lawson wrote:
There is the package 'transcode' under linux, although I've never used it myself.
I've used it a fair bit for ripping DVDs. It's an excellent program and it works really well. The downside is that it's quite difficult to use and has huge long arcane command lines. On the plus side there are heaps of examples on the website that you can usually just copy / paste from. See the homepage at http://zebra.fh-weingarten.de/~transcode/ or their wiki at http://www.transcoding.org/ for more information . HTH Regards -- Matt Brown matt(a)mattb.net.nz Mob +64 275 611 544 www.mattb.net.nz

Matt Brown wrote:
On Tue, 2005-01-11 at 14:48 +1300, Daniel Lawson wrote:
There is the package 'transcode' under linux, although I've never used it myself.
I've used it a fair bit for ripping DVDs. It's an excellent program and it works really well.
The downside is that it's quite difficult to use and has huge long arcane command lines. On the plus side there are heaps of examples on the website that you can usually just copy / paste from.
See the homepage at http://zebra.fh-weingarten.de/~transcode/ or their wiki at http://www.transcoding.org/ for more information .
HTH Regards
Just been through this myself trying to get a windows media file into a sensible format. Mencode is great as it will read almost any format and write most sensible formats without too much hassle. I recall a lot of applications were around that could transcode but for the most part you had to split the audio/video process individually then recombine, all requiring lots diskspace. Mencoder seemed to pull all this together nicely in a just do it kinda manner
participants (6)
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Daniel Lawson
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Gund Wehsling
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Jason Drake
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Malcolm
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Matt Brown
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Perry Lorier