Reinhard Nissl schrieb:
Hi,
Stefan Lucke wrote:
Dumping the first 16 bytes of audio packets we get, shows the following:
ff fc a4 0d b6 64 88 55 33 65 56 54 44 21 33 33
ff fc a4 0d 54 6a 88 65 33 44 56 54 33 33 33 33
ff fc a4 0d 02 a4 88 55 33 54 66 44 43 33 33 33
99 77 1b e6 34 b2 5f
Hi,
Reinhard Nissl schrieb:
Hi,
Martin Wache wrote:
Is there a reason why the cAudioRepacker is used in transfer mode and
during recordings, but not while replaying?
Well, when cAudioRepacker was active while recording, then there is no
need for it when replaying such a recording.
Udo Richter wrote:
This has been in my mind for over two years, and now I just wanted to
see it working: Using hard file system links to speed up editing
whenever a 00x.vdr file is copied from source to destination recording
without modification.
This has crossed my mind several times as
On 6 Mar 2007, at 11:44, Torgeir Veimo wrote:
I'm using a lirc setup with inputlircd daemon with a hauppauge
remote on a dvb card. Everything works with the remote plugins
using /dev/input/eventX, but I'm trying to share the remote with
several applications.
For some reason when trying
On Saturday 17 March 2007 23:11, Martin Wache wrote:
Hi,
Reinhard Nissl schrieb:
And old recordings will
vanish as time passes by.
I don't buy this argument. I know that there are VDR users with large
archives of recordings, do you want to tell them that they can't use
them any
On Saturday 17 March 2007 22:05, Martin Wache wrote:
I attached a patch with make the softdevice use av_read_frame(), it has
still some issues, but it solves the problems Stefan reports.
Martin, thats really great.
Thank you.
This solves the issue I had with playback of some old recordings.
Hi,
Martin Wache wrote:
Is there a reason why the cAudioRepacker is used in transfer mode and
during recordings, but not while replaying?
Well, when cAudioRepacker was active while recording, then there is no
need for it when replaying such a recording.
Wouldn't it make more sense to use
Hi,
Richard Lithvall wrote:
Why not just change the naming of video files to four, five or even
eight digits?
The problem is not the file name, it's the index file. An index entry
stores the file number as uchar, which allows 256 recording files.
Bye.
--
Dipl.-Inform. (FH) Reinhard Nissl