VHS To Computer File?
Author
Discussion

GCerbera

Original Poster:

5,161 posts

277 months

Wednesday 7th April 2004
quotequote all
Can anyone tell me the following.

1) What format is it best to save a file in for viewing on line? (MPEG etc)

2) What is required to do this?

3) How do you compress the size of the file for quicker viewing?

Mainly applies to changing VHS footage to PC, but also Video 8 etc.

Many thanks.

agent006

12,058 posts

290 months

Wednesday 7th April 2004
quotequote all
I find that WMV is the best format. I use Stoic video sometingorother. It's free and easily found with the assistance of google.

marlboro

637 posts

297 months

Wednesday 7th April 2004
quotequote all

For VHS I use one of these:

www.adaptec.com/worldwide/product/proddetail.html?sess=no&language=English+US&prodkey=AVC-1100&cat=%2fTechnology%2fVideo%2fVideo+Capture+and+Creation

Go for the PCI or USB2.0 product if your budget allows. Come complete with software for yor needs

I also have the PCI variant.

>> Edited by marlboro on Wednesday 7th April 19:08

slinksport

15,704 posts

275 months

Wednesday 7th April 2004
quotequote all
On a further note, how can I convert from MPEG to MP4??

I'd like to stick one or two videos on my phone, but it'll only play MP4's!!

agent006

12,058 posts

290 months

Wednesday 7th April 2004
quotequote all
marlboro said:

Go for the PCI or USB2.0 product if your budget allows.


I'd go as far as saying wait until your budget allows for the USB2 one. USB 1.1 really isn't fast enough for video.

J_S_G

6,177 posts

276 months

Wednesday 7th April 2004
quotequote all
agent006 said:

marlboro said:

Go for the PCI or USB2.0 product if your budget allows.



I'd go as far as saying wait until your budget allows for the USB2 one. USB 1.1 really isn't fast enough for video.

I'd agree with that. Best format for movies is currently (arguably) XVid. You can easily fit a full feature film on a single CD at near-DVD quality (none of the extras, though). After that I'd place the likes of DivX, etc. If the video is for private viewing only, I'd go for one of the nicer (if rarer) formats like that, if it's for public distribution, you're probably better off going with Windows Media format (WMV) or something equally prevalent.

Edt

5,231 posts

310 months

Thursday 8th April 2004
quotequote all
good old fashioned MPG (1) is still the most accepted on ALL platforms, IMO

Regards, Ed

J_S_G

6,177 posts

276 months

Thursday 8th April 2004
quotequote all
Edt said:
good old fashioned MPG (1) is still the most accepted on ALL platforms, IMO

Regards, Ed
Probably right. But assuming people are running Windows (fair assumption in 95+% of cases), AVI or WMV would be a good call.

trooper1212

9,457 posts

278 months

Thursday 8th April 2004
quotequote all
J_S_G said:

Edt said:
good old fashioned MPG (1) is still the most accepted on ALL platforms, IMO

Regards, Ed

Probably right. But assuming people are running Windows (fair assumption in 95+% of cases), AVI or WMV would be a good call.


Even if they are not running Windows WMV won't be a problem, there are a lot of players for all different platforms that will handle WMV files, as long as they haven't been encoded in the certified media player 9 format.

AVI is a different kettle of fish though as it's just the wrapper and can be encoded in pretty much any format you like and be called an AVI.

I'd recommend QuickTime, but i'm a Mac floozy

Edt

5,231 posts

310 months

Thursday 8th April 2004
quotequote all
That rings a bell.. it was some wmv media encoded to v9 that caused problems.. but on a PC ! Ho well. Stick in on VHS !!

Regards, Ed

jam1et

1,536 posts

278 months

Thursday 8th April 2004
quotequote all
slinksport said:
On a further note, how can I convert from MPEG to MP4??






Download the 30 day trial of this product

>> Edited by jam1et on Thursday 8th April 16:17

CarZee

13,382 posts

293 months

Friday 9th April 2004
quotequote all
answers to all these questions on www.dvdrhelp.com

Quality site.

GCerbera

Original Poster:

5,161 posts

277 months

Sunday 11th April 2004
quotequote all
Many thanks for all the great replies.

Just tried my first ever video8 transfer, see below.
Technically not perfect by any means and the quality seems to have dropped out?
Is that due to saving it as a WMV file?

First Attempt