The PVR s/w runs on PCs only but it records to a format which seems to
be referred to as PVA. A free PC tool called PVAStrumento lets you
demux this, and it stores the results on my Mac's hard drive. It also
fixes
any errors which occurred while the transport stream was being received.
I
Hello,
The video is encoded by the broadcaster, not me. I have
a digital TV receiver connected to a PC which has software
which can record the digital TV MPEG2 stream to its hard
disk. With a quick demux/remux the recordings can be put onto
DVD with no MPEG transcoding at all, i.e. the DVD
Hallo
The video is encoded by the broadcaster, not me. I have
a digital TV receiver connected to a PC which has software
which can record the digital TV MPEG2 stream to its hard
disk. With a quick demux/remux the recordings can be put onto
So you have a signal from a digital satelite ?
[...]
The video is encoded by the broadcaster, not me. I have
a digital TV receiver connected to a PC which has software
which can record the digital TV MPEG2 stream to its hard
disk.
I've got one myself... a huge leap forward over analog stuff...
With a quick demux/remux the recordings can be
On Sunday, Jan 19, 2003, at 15:06 Europe/London, Andrew Stevens wrote:
This is not always going to work as DVB allows higher peak bitrates
than DVD.
Fortunately digital TV in the UK complies to DVD's 720x572 PAL
resolution standard and bit rates tend to average around 4mbit
for the best
Hello,
I am wondering if there is a way to use mplex such that it starts from
n seconds into the audio and video sources given to it. At present
it can be made to mplex n seconds of material from the start of
the audio and video sources but is there a way to perform a simple
kind of editing to
Hallo
I am wondering if there is a way to use mplex such that it starts from
n seconds into the audio and video sources given to it. At present
it can be made to mplex n seconds of material from the start of
the audio and video sources but is there a way to perform a simple
kind of editing