On Thu, Aug 23, 2001 at 12:22:24PM +0200, Gabriel Gerhardsson wrote:
> > The correct way is to adjust the clock frequency of your sound card.

well it's not correct in the right sence of word - but it good hack
for now :)

> > For maestro, this is done by using the
> > clocking=some_number_in_my_case_48820
> > module option. For other cards, you probably have to change it in the
> source
> > code. You can find the value experimentally.
> > Eugene/Zdenek/whoever, please add this to the faq or something.

I think kernel modification would be too much scary for videoplayer users :)

> 
> By doing that you are (as I understand) adjusting the speed of the sound
> to match the speed of the video.
> Zdenek is working on a new sync-engine that instead automagicaly adjusts
> the video-speed to the sound-speed. Wait for him to finish that instead.

I think it will not be that easy - at least it's not easy to estimate
amount of currently played bytes by SDL audio driver.
But some timesliding could be implemented.

Meanwhile I've added three lines of code and removed 15 others
and I believe now the image will not jump even with highest
postprocessing level in autoquality (as it used to do from time time)

I think this looks like final solution to this problem for me - so
does anyone else with reasonable powerful machine experiences any
jerk with video playing ??
(as for me - there is no longer difference between Xine and avifile
in the scheduling quality - of course xine doesn't have autoquality :))

-- 
         Debian GNU/Linux maintainer - www.debian.{org,cz}
 Zdenek Kabelac  http://i.am/kabi/ kabi@{i.am, debian.org, fi.muni.cz}
          Resistance is futile. You all will be packaged

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