Even more info:

the -vop pp=0x20000 options gets rid of the "chunky" interlacing artifacts,
but replaces
it with jerky motion.

Neil

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Neil Radisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Neil Radisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Ville Syrj�l�"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, November 10, 2003 8:11 PM
Subject: [directfb-users] Re: [MPlayer-dev-eng] matrox 550 tv out and
mplayer problem


More information.

After a careful viewing on my COMPUTER monitor, I noticed that the initial
sequence (which
plays fine on the TV) also looks fine on the computer monitor. The sequence
that is screwed up on
the TV is loaded with interlace artifacts on the computer monitor.

Neil

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Neil Radisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Ville Syrj�l�" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, November 10, 2003 11:20 AM
Subject: [directfb-users] Re: [MPlayer-dev-eng] matrox 550 tv out and
mplayer problem


No unexpected artifacts on the computer monitor.

I can't completely confirm this yet, but it seems to be related to
framerate. All
the disks that show the problem eventually say something like

------
A:   0.8 V:   0.7 A-V:  0.110 ct:  0.037   15/ 12   0%  0%  0.0% 0 0 0%
demux_mpg: 3:2 TELECINE detected, enabling inverse telecine fx. FPS changed
to 23.976!
A:   2.7 V:   2.7 A-V:  0.015 ct:  0.083   63/ 60  33% 33%  3.3% 0 0 0%
demux_mpg: Progressive seq detected, leaving 3:2 TELECINE mode
Warning! FPS changed 23.976 -> 29.970  (-5.994000) [4]  3%  3.3% 0 0 0%
A:   6.8 V:   6.3 A-V:  0.499 ct:  0.441  172/169  56% 31%  3.6% 79 0 0%

---------------

or something like that.

Could there be some issue with disks that are actually encoded at 29.97?

Neil

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Ville Syrj�l�" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, November 10, 2003 9:12 AM
Subject: [directfb-users] Re: [MPlayer-dev-eng] matrox 550 tv out and
mplayer problem


On Mon, Nov 10, 2003 at 08:58:40AM -0500, Neil Radisch wrote:
> The only way I can describe it is to say it's a similar effect to
> interlacing artifacts when
> you try and play interlaced material on a computer monitor. However,
unlike
> interlace artifacts
> which are thin line-by-line abberations, this is "chunkier". More like
bars
> than lines.

And can you see any artifacts when you watch it on a monitor?

If the problem is indeed interlacing you can try to use the fieldparity
option to get rid of it. But that works only if the field parity stays
constant.

-- 
Ville Syrj�l�
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.sci.fi/~syrjala/


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