Right,
the program works now, thanks again (!), I reduced a file successfully to 700kb.
The original file (private stuff of course) is in a folder on my desktop.
It has two sub-folders, the usual Audio_TS & Video_TS.
The format seems to be like that on commercial DVDs, so "something.VOB", coming in four seperate bits like "something_1.VOB" etc.
When I start this with VLC, I simply drag the whole folder in.
That is what I did with ffmpegX (o.o.9k), I selected that folder.
The settings I left as they came, I never changed anything in the program.
It created an avi file of the correct size (700mb),
but:
No sound &
the proportions contorted.
Questions:
1. How to get it incorporate the sound? (The Audio_TS is empty, but the movie has sound!)
2. How to make it have the same proportions of length and width as the original?
Thanks, help appreciated!
Jens
Results 1 to 8 of 8
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Originally Posted by jburkhardt
In converting with ffmpegx, there is an option for selecting the audio track to be converted. Ffmpegx will default to some particular track, but it's possible that the track either contains no audio, or has audio in a format that ffmpegx can't handle. When you drag the file to be converted onto ffmpegx, what does ffmpegx say about what the audio is?
As for the proportions ("aspect ratio"), ffmpegx will not always select the right one automatically. You may have to override its choices manually.
For converting from DVD into Divx or Xvid .avi, you may wish to consider using D-Vision3. It has a less confusing interface, and it is smarter about selecting appropriate audio tracks and aspect ratio. In general, it is the closest to a "one-click" converter as exists. It is freeware, so it won't cost you anything to try it to see if it serves your purposes. No criticism intended of ffmpegx, but its flexibility is both its strength and weakness -- it can do so many things that the user has to fiddle with quite a few parameters to get the desired results. D-Vision focuses on just the conversion from DVD to Divx (or Xvid), and so it is correspondingly simpler to operate.
Good luck with whatever you choose!
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Originally Posted by jburkhardt
Originally Posted by jburkhardt
Originally Posted by jburkhardt
Originally Posted by jburkhardt
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Originally Posted by Case
[/quote]Normally ffmpegX handles the most common types of audio from VIDEO_TS folders just fine, using a mencoder preset (which you did, as that preset is default). To find out why it didn't work, please enlighten us by supplying details from ...[/quote]
I made another attempt later, directing it not to the video whole folder, but just to the video_ts, that worked.
I got other problems now though, which have to do with that i simply dont know what all the otions mean ...
like: the converted file does not play the full video length ...
so, i for now try that d-vision thing as suggested above.
thanks.
sorry, i tried three times, cant figure out this thing with the quotes ... yes --- gotta go, has to do like this for now.
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I'm very glad to hear that it did the job for you. I use D-Vision all the time for the same purpose, and for the same reasons. I rarely have to override any of its choices (and those rare situations generally involve figuring out which of several mislabeled language tracks is the one I really want; not too hard to figure out).
Enjoy!
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