On Wed, 2002-10-09 at 04:30, Liam Ward wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> I am looking at a project for a TV  broadcaster that needs to record 
> their output for legal reasons. They currently do this using VHS and 
> changing tapes every few hours (in fact there are two systems so that 
> they don't miss anything while changing tapes). They've asked us to 
> look at an MPEG-1 based system to replace it. I would love to do this 
> using Linux, if at all possible. I wouldn't trust Windows to do this 
> daily, reliably, for any significant period of time without falling 
> over.
> 
> They broadcast around 18 hours a day, so my initial thought was 
> something along the lines of an MPEG-1 card creating an 18-hour long 
> MPEG-1 file for each day. 
> 
> So my questions...
> 
> - Is there a well-supported MPEG-1 card for Linux? Are there any that 
> can do burnt-in wallclock timecode? (The second requirement is a nice-
> to-have, otherwise we use some external device to add it)
> 
> - Does an 18-hour MPEG-1 seem practical? Would software players be 
> able to play it back?
> 
> I would be grateful for any hints.
> 

I have had good luck with MP1E (zapping.sf.net) and a standard BTTV
card.  I have never recorded anything that long, the most I do is an
hour.  I don't see any reason why a software player wouldn't be able to
play back the video...

Rett Walters


> Thanks,
> 
> Liam
> 
> 
> -- 
> Liam Ward
> DV4
> t: +353 1 672 7250
> e: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> w: www.dv4.com
> 
> 
> 
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