[EMAIL PROTECTED] <> wrote: >> In windows, you have to use the dsmyth filters. nothing in windows >> (or linux, for that matter) properly understands the changes that >> Isaac has made to the NUV file format -- regardless of what kind of >> video is inside of it. >> > I'm not sure I buy that. At least 3 different programs > allegedly > can handle them: 'mythtranscode,' 'nuvexport,' and 'nuv2avi.' The > former 2 require the database, and the latter breaks sync when > dealing with cut/transcoded MPEG4 .nuv files.
Not sure what nuv2avi program you are refering to, but i did a nuv2avi program and i never finished the it so it have a/v sync problems. I have an idea on how to fix it, by counting "holes" for both audio and video and then comparing how much difference there is between them and then insert extra video frames when it gets out of sync. > > Non-MPEG2 content (e.g. cutlisted and transcoded internal to mythtv): > - No direct export possible since nuvexport must reencode and > the .nuv > files haven't been successfully converted into something normal > externally. > > Is that the current state of affairs? > > -Cory You can use the dsmyth filters to convert a nonmpeg2 nuv file to avi without recompression. If you have graphedit, just add a file source filter and open the nuv file, connect the nuv splitter filter to it, and add a avi mux filter, connect both audio and video pins from splitter to mux and then add a file writer to the output from the mux and specify filename to write to. Press play and wait a short while. Done, now you shod have a avi file that does not have any a/v sync problems. All this coud be simplified by a small app that does most work, maybe just 2 text boxes for source and destination filename and a "Start" button or something like that. _______________________________________________ mythtv-users mailing list [email protected] http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users
