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Just open the file in TAW4. An error window will show up for each missing file; in the window, click on the "Browse..." button and select the file in it's new location.
When I extract an mpeg2 m2ts file from a home generated Bluray Disc, TAW5 wants to rerender it. Is there a way to determine why it won't smart-render the file? The file is generated by ProShow Gold.
Please help...I've pulled out most of my hair....
give us the video properties. GOP structure over 30 along with mbaff nonmbaff coding causes issues in regards to smart rendering in tmpgenc software. I have the same issue with files outputted by our HDPVR.
It may be an audio format that is unsupported or you may not have the right codec for it. Use a program like MediaInfo to find out what format your audio stream is in.
It's in dts which is supported. Whats odd is I have a bunch of vids I've put together in ac3, dolby digital, stereo, mono, and with mkv files none of the formats are even recognized.
DTS is not native supported by TAW5, you have to tweak a little to get the support by installing FFDSHOW and Haali Media Splitter and then first make some changes in FFDSHOW's audio settings:
TrueHD to libavcodec (to get Dolby True HD support, explanation why will follow)
DTS to libdts
Uncompressed to all supported
After that you have to tweak TAW5 to use FFDSHOW and Haali by going to TAW5's input plug-ins:
Options => Preferences => Input/output format list => File input plug-in.
Here you must remove every marker, but not the one at DirectShow file reader.
When this is done, DTS and Dolby True HD support in TAW5 has been established.
Reggarding Dolby True HD and DTS-HD Master:
People have figured out how to put the HD audio from Blu-ray's in to MKV files. Lately, i have come across several MKV's with both Dolby True HD and DTS-HD Master audio in them.
The adjustment explained above for FFDSHOW will give you the support for Dolby True HD.
DTS HD-Master is not supported though. That audio type you will not be able to open in TAW5, because FFDSHOW does not deliver support for it. It only delivers support for standard DTS, the one who is also used on DVD's.
I've completed all that and was able to get the software to recognize the audio. However, it doesn't recognize it correctly. It recognizes DTS as 2 Chanel stereo. Mediainfo and tsmuxer specify the audio as DTS
>I've completed all that and was able to get the software to recognize the audio. However, it doesn't recognize it correctly. It recognizes DTS as 2 Chanel stereo. Mediainfo and tsmuxer specify the audio as DTS
You need to disable mixer in the FFDSHOW filter, then it will show as 5,1
New to Smart Renderer. Trying to figure out how to adjust bit rate to bring video size down. I video my kids clubs soccer games and files are 6/8 GB and need them to be smaller for S3 storage.
Smart Renderer 4 is not a video converter; it's made to keep the output the same as the input as much as possible.
However, there are ways around it using the Rescue clip function. You need to have an existing MPEG file at your desired bitrate and use that file as the Master clip. Your new video will then be re-encoded to match that clip.
Evaluating TAW 5 using trial version. Load 3 TS files form a Canon HFG10 camcorder. Create top menu on track page and a pop-up menu. Create BDMV output. TAW appropriately re-encodes a few pieces to put the watermark in but otherwise shows "lossless". Burn disc. Put in Panasonic BR player and it stops during reading saying "incompatible format".
Any ideas what may be wrong? Ths player plays anything from TS Muxer and Total Media Extreme. when it burps it seldom gives an error message.
My BD recorder is old (GGW-H20L), but once I step TAW5 burn well for PC, but my BD-Player did not read it, I saw that the recording was minimally smaller, TAW4-5 perform shorter recording (Lead -in and lead-out) for DVD and BD.
Currently recording with Nero UDF BD-R-ISO 2.5 (physical partition), and update my firmware on the recorder to the YL07 version (11th May, 2011). although it is not very compatible with LTH disc or cheap versions. works with BD-R DL (check their website MYCE Club)
All Kepler GPUs also incorporate a new hardware-based H.264 video encoder, NVENC.
Prior to the introduction of Kepler, video encoding on previous GeForce products was handled by encode software running on the GPU’s array of CUDA Cores. While the CUDA Cores were able to deliver tremendous performance speedups compared to CPU-based encoding, one downside of using these high-speed processor cores to process video encoding was increased power consumption.
By using specialized circuitry for H.264 encoding, the NVENC hardware encoder in Kepler is almost four times faster than our previous CUDA-based encoder while consuming much less power.
It is important to note that an application can choose to encode using both NVENC hardware and NVIDIA’s legacy CUDA encoder in parallel, without negatively affecting each other. However, some video pre-processing algorithms may require CUDA, and this will result in reduced performance from the CUDA encoder since the available CUDA Cores will be shared by the encoder and pre-processor.
NVENC provides the following:
Can encode full HD resolution (1080p) videos up to 8x faster than real-time. For example, in high performance mode, encoding of a 16 minute long 1080p, 30 fps video will take approximately 2 minutes.
Support for H.264 Base, Main, and High Profile Level 4.1 (same as Blu-ray standard)
Supports MVC (Multiview Video Coding) for stereoscopic video—an extension of H.264 which is used for Blu-ray 3D.
Up to 4096x4096 encode
We currently expose NVENC through proprietary APIs, and provide an SDK for development using NVENC. Later this year, CUDA developers will also be able to use the high performance NVENC video encoder. For example, you could use the compute engines for video pre-processing and then do the actual H.264 encoding in NVENC. Alternatively, you can choose to improve overall video encoding performance by running simultaneous parallel encoders in CUDA and NVENC, without affecting each other’s performance.
NVENC enables a wide range of new use cases for consumers:
HD videoconferencing on mainstream notebooks
Sending the contents of the desktop to the big screen TV (gaming, video) through a wireless connection
Authoring high quality Blu-ray discs from your HD camcorder
A beta version of Cyberlink MediaEspresso with NVENC support is now available on the GeForce GTX 680 press FTP. Support will be coming soon for Cyberlink PowerDirector and Arcsoft MediaConverter.
Video Mastering Works 5 inhibits / disables the screensaver while encoding. This on Windows 7. Does anyone know how to prevent VMW5 from inhibiting the screensaver?
It's nice software but there seems to be one bug. I set the end frame of a clip once and saved the project. I opened the project and the new end frame had been saved OK. I changed the end frame, saved the project and opened it again but this end frame had not been saved. This happened with several projects. It is very alarming ! I have reported this to the company and asked them to issue an update to correct this as soon as possible but I thought I should also report it here meanwhile.
I have TVMW5.1.3.85 and TAW5 installed on my windows 7 64-bit computer. Recently, when I tried to convert an mp4 file to mpeg-2 format, I got the following error message: "tmpgencvmw5encoder.exe cannot be launched as a stand-alone application"
I re-downloaded and re-installed TVMW5 and it did not fix the problem. What am I doing wrong?
Delete or rename the file TMPGEncVMW5Encoder.exe
Then re-install or repair the installation. The correct TMPGEncVMW5Encoder.exe file for this version has a file size of 245 KB and a date of 9/5/2012
or remove the old version before installing the new
version 50826
When importing many short TS videos at the same time as from a dance recital the program analyzes the file then asks to specify TS file title selection which are identical either Playlist 1 or Program 1 . This goes on for every file and it is a big waste of time so I'm not using Tmpgenc Authoring works for TS to DVD making, but I would if I could figure how to just go ahead and Import a bunch of files by dragging them into the source window without the slow one by one procedure now used
Any way to do this?
thanks
Very odd. The only problem I've run into so far is when I import some mkv files. The program will freeze. Haven't had any slow down issues though. I'm using a fresh install of windows 8 though. No other programs insralled
I thought that the oddities that were happening were a result of upgrading from TAW4 to TAW 5 until I realised that there was another variable. I had upgraded from Windows 7 to Windows 8 as well. 80% of my divx files will not allow to be converted. The video was totally lines and pixelation. I tried various other codecs but to no avail. 20% of my files will encode. I now think that Windows 8 MAY be the problem.
BTW I stall have TAw 4 running on an older computer and the said files were converted with TAw4. I suppose that that is my solution for the time being.
I am creating a custom Blu-ray menu with a background image that I made in Photoshop. When importing the new BG into BG Editor the image looks fine, like it should. Then when I click OK the actual menu looks like it's being compressed like crazy. The text is blurry and pixelated and the gradient that is used is dithered.
Again, the image looks completely FINE in BG Editor. Though when it goes to the actual menu it is either compressed or Authoring Works imported it as a small image and then resized it causing it to pixelate.
Couple of notes;
1. I have done this before with no problems
2. I have tried importing BG as JPEG/PSD/TIFF/PNG
3. The file is in standard HD settings (1920x1080 - square pixel ratio)
4. Get the same result if I attempt to increase DPI