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Pegasys Products BBS [ Sorted by thread creation date ]
I just installed a GTS 450 Nvidia card, when I try to select overlay mode when I am adding filters it's greyed out, can someone tell me what I can do to get it working?
Do you have any other programs running that is using the overlay? For instance if you're using a program like PowerDVD, you won't be able to use overlay mode.
No Im only running the main program with nothing else taking up video resources in the background.
With my Radeon card I had the option to select it and if something else was using it I would get an error saying I cant enable it, but now with the Nvidia card it is greyed out.
Ive tried the last 3 versions and they are all greyed out.
Was doing a bit of research and it looks like Windows 7 handles hardware overlays in a different way than older verisons of Windows-- this is most likely why overlay mode won't work on your machine.
I'd have to run a virtualmachine and run virtual XP with Windows 7 to get it to work right? But wouldn't that be a huge memory hog doing it like that?
Well at least I could get my settings the way I want them and save the Txp4 file and re-open it again on Windows 7 in Tmpgenc.
Just thought I'd share my experiences of the past few days.
After using (and loving) TAW4 under 32-bit Windows XP for some time, I upgraded to 64-bit Windows 7. TAW4 installed just fine and works flawlessly - on NEW projects.
When I opened a project created under my old installation however, the only elements visible on the Menu pages were those I had added to the template myself (like extra text boxes). The backgrounds and buttons from the template itself were nowhere to be seen.
I had a hunch this was because the name of the programs directory has changed from "C:\Program Files" to "C:\Program Files (x86)" for 32-bit applications like TAW4.
Sure enough, when I copied TAW4's "Templates" directory:
"C:\Program Files (x86)\Pegasys Inc\TMPGEnc Authoring Works 4\Template"
...into another location...
"C:\Program Files\Pegasys Inc\TMPGEnc Authoring Works 4\Template"
...all of my old projects started displaying correctly again.
Seems that TAW4 doesn't know it should be using the %ProgramFiles(x86)% environment variable instead of %ProgramFiles% when it identifies that it's in a 64-bit environment.
Hopefully this work-around will help some folks until a fix can be made in later versions of this excellent software.
The DVD will have 4 tracks (4 independent video clips).
It will also have a short first play video separate from the clips.
I want a top menu following the first play clip with links to the four tracks.
Two tracks are to play the video directly with no separate track menu
Two tracks are to have a track menu with links to 5 chapter points in their video and a return button.
Each video will also have additional chapter points that are not linked to menu buttons, but used to allow faster navigation withthe skip button..
Can I do this with AW4? Not obvious from its highly strcuture process, tutorials, or Help files.
Yes, this is possible. The key is to use the Global Menu Settings to set which menu pages are displayed.
So your process would be to first create your menus as normal, then go to the Global Menu Settings and uncheck the track 1 and track 2 pages so they don't appear. Any chapter points you set will still work when playing the actual movie.
You can set almost anything (buttons, thumbnails, etc.) to either visible or invisible with the global menu settings.
Thanks. Your response helped me a lot in developing an undestanding of how AW4 works and solved my immediate issue as well.
As a previous user of Reel DVD, Encore DVD, and DVD LAB Pro, AW4 is rather different. The big diffence in Menu building appears to me to be the concept that AW4 gives a near complete starting point, and I remove, hide or inactivate rather than add items.
I think every encoding tool now uses H/X 264 for HD encoding except you lot, why is this? This is the only thing that is putting me off buying this software. I would like to have a few HD movies on 1 blu-ray disc, and am currently using mulitAVCHD for this, but its not as easy as Authoring works.
I like this software because I find it user friendly so I can edit my videos. I've tried to buy it, but I'm told each time that there's something wrong with my credit card information. I've tried to find a phone number so I can purchase the old fashioned way by giving my credit card information to an operator, but haven't had any luck.
What's up with you people who make this software? Don't you want to make a profit?
I have been using DVD Author 3 for a few years with no problems. My sister-in-law gave me MPEG-4 clips of her vacation which are HD. I wanted to put the clips together, add subtitles, and burn them to a DVD that can be viewed in a regular DVD player. Everything goes the same as usual until I start the output. About an hour into the output, which it says is 17% done, the process stops and I get the error message:
>Could not initialize QuickTime (-9461).
Thinking that the problem was with QuickTime, I installed the newest version, but that did not solve the problem.
Is there some setting that needs to be changed when working with HD videos? Does DVD Author 3 work with HD MPEG-4 clips?
1) Open QuickTime Player (Windows Start menu-->QuickTime-->QuickTime Player). Then open the preferences (Edit-->Preferences-->QuickTime Preferences). In the QuickTime Preferences window go to the Advanced tab and make sure the box is checked for "Enable encoding using legacy codecs". If it's already checked, or if this doesn't fix the error you're getting, try option 2:
2) Disable the QuickTime file reader.
In DVD Author 3, go to the Preferences (Options-->Preferences), then go to the File Input plug-in section (Input format list-->File input plug-in). You should see a list of the file readers. Uncheck the QuickTime file reader and click the OK button to confirm your settings.
This should force your MPEG-4 file to be read by a different file reader, most likely the DirectShow file reader. Try and import your file. If you get an error that the video or audio part can't be opened, then you'll need to install some codecs. ffdshow will probably do the trick, and you might need Haali Media Splitter if you don't have that either.
I specifically downloaded tmpenc express to change the playback speed on films & lectures, basically speed them up, are there any options as i cant see this anywhere in the demo i've downloaded
No options to alter playback speed in filters or options
Which is surprising even VLC allows you to change the playback speed decoding ...
If you learn some of the basics of AviSynth, you can easily write an .avs file with whatever you want to do - such as change the speed (& lower the pitch), crop, fade, etc... TMPGEnc AW4 & XPress both import .avs files, along with most other encoding programs that will accept an .avi file.
I am trying to create mp4 file from my AVCHD camera clips. I can create mp4 file, but I cannot find any way to create chapters in the mp4 file. Can TmpGenc Express 4 do that?
As far as I know, there is no way to make chapters with an mp4 file, as the format does not support it (it's like trying to make chapters with an AVI file)
2. Clip addition source
From a file -> browse where the new .m2v file is -> select Cut-edit and on that window I only see 2 frames (the star and end frame) and I don't see anything in the midle.
Am I doing something wrong ?
Thank you,
Gonzalo
P.S: If I open the .vob anyway, on the Cut-edit window I can see the complete video.
Not sure if you're doing something wrong...I demuxed a vob and I was able to cut-edit the .m2v file just fine.
Have you tried it with other .vob files?
I have an automated process for generating a time lapse movie from an HD weathercam each day and needed to find a way to use TMPGEnc *unattended* to transcode and (and crop and deflicker) the very large avi file into a final form suitable for uploading to my website. Since I have a project file already defined with all the necessary options that operates on and produces fixed files all I needed was a way to get TMPGEnc to run it automatically *without any operator input*.
Although you can pass a project file and have it load it on startup, a bit of searching led me to understand that there is no other command line interface. So I then looked to see if there was an option for having it automatically start a project file when it's loaded. Unfortunately I didn't find anything even though the corresponding "finishing task" option does exist.
Not willing to give up I put together the following simple vbscript code segment that will launch TMPGEnc with the specified project file and then send the keyboard shortcuts for moving to the Encode window and start the process. The only extra thing it does is to first delete the old previously generated movie to prevent the TMPGEnc UI from hanging with the “file exists, do you want to overwrite” dialog.
Note that this is far from an ideal option and assumes a preexisting project file in a known location and both the input and output files are “hard coded” in that project. Although there is no meaningful error checking and essentially no flexibility, at least it allows the basic unattended operation I needed to allow the encoding job to run automatically in the middle of the night as part of a larger automated process.
Dim outFile, filesys, objShell, objExecObject, cmd
Set filesys = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
'wscript.echo "checking for old movie"
If (filesys.FileExists(outFile)) Then
wscript.echo "deleting old movie to prevent TMPGEnc dialog"
filesys.DeleteFile outFile
End If
I got this software to edit my movies so I can remove the scenes I don't want and keep the scenes that I do. I have the trial version BTW.
I start the software, click "Start a new project" from the Project menu, click "Add file", load the movie I want to edit, then I select Cut-edit, and edit my movie. But I can't find a way to save my edits?
You have to output your video in order for the video to actually be edited, otherwise you're not really doing anything. Outputting will not overwrite your original video; instead it will re-encode it to the format you specify in the format stage.
You can also save your project if you don't want to output, but I think that's disabled in the trial version.
At the top of the main window, there's 4 buttons: Start, Source, Format, and Encode. These are the basic steps to edit and output your video.
If you've edited your video, you're probably at the Source stage.
Now click on the Format button to choose your output format.
Once you chosen your format, you can click on the Encode button and click on the Start Encode button (the round button in the bottom left corner) to start the encoding process.
It's time to reduce the file space being taken by my 13,000 music videos and it is apparent that the mp4 file format will be the eventual winner in the video compression codec wars.
All the older videos are NTSC 4:3 size ratio BUT are being viewed on a high def wide screen 52" monitor.
All the newer videos are NTSC 16:9 size ratio AND are being viewed on a high def wide screen 52" monitor.
My cry for help is hopefully very simple to answer.
A) When converting the 4:3 vids to mp4, what are the ideal settings in TMPG to insure a very high quality audio and video output with the greatest reduction in file size that will maximize the available screen space on a wide screen monitor? Please, be specific, tab by tab, and as simply defined as possible. I'm not too smart.
B) When converting the 16:9 vids to mp4, what are the ideal settings in TMPG to insure a very high quality audio and video output with the greatest reduction in file size that will maximize the available screen space on a wide screen monitor? Please, be specific, tab by tab, and as simply defined as possible. I'm not too smart, remember.
Currently, this is what I'm doing for any video regardless of wide screen or not:
Output Container: Normal
Video:
Profile: Main; Level: Automatic Level 4.1 and less
Size: 720 x 480; Framerate: 29.97
Rate Control: 2 pass variable; Ave bitrate: 3,500; Max bitrate: 10,000; Motion Range: 63; Bitrate Buffer: 0 Auto
Video System: NTSC; Detect Scene Change: unchecked
AVC:
GOP: 33; 8 Frame: 0; Reference Frame: 2
Quantization: I Picture: 24; P Picture: 25, B Picture: 27
Entropy coding mode: CAVLC; Motion Estimation subpel: Quarter pixel