Forum: Poser - OFFICIAL


Subject: OT: video cleaning software?

xantor opened this issue on Feb 08, 2007 · 8 posts


xantor posted Thu, 08 February 2007 at 4:15 AM

I have some vhs video tapes that I want to convert to dvd, I have tried this already but I would like to edit out the lines and other noise that the videos have, does anyone know a video editing program that will edit out the rough parts of the video?


ghelmer posted Thu, 08 February 2007 at 9:38 PM

Attached Link: http://www.virtualdub.org/

VirtualDub works great for all manner of video editing needs!!!  Lots of different filters for you to play with to get your vids looking how ya want!

Also...  works great for animations rendered to images for converting to video!!!

Give it a try...  it's free!!!

Gerard

The GR00VY GH0ULIE!

You are pure, you are snow
We are the useless sluts that they mould
Rock n roll is our epiphany
Culture, alienation, boredom and despair


Little_Dragon posted Thu, 08 February 2007 at 11:01 PM

VDub also has some nice capture options, provided you have capture hardware.

I've been using the software for years, so if you have any technical questions, I'd be happy to answer them over in the Director's Cut forum.



xantor posted Fri, 09 February 2007 at 5:10 AM

Thank you, if you want to look at the thread at  the link, I have another question.

http://www.renderosity.com/mod/forumpro/showthread.php?thread_id=2684527


xantor posted Fri, 09 February 2007 at 5:11 AM

Little dragon, what are the nice capture options?  I thought I would ask that in this forum because it makes more sense being here.


Little_Dragon posted Mon, 12 February 2007 at 7:02 AM

It can use almost any hardware that has a capture driver (VFW, WDM, or DirectShow).  You can capture to different resolutions, framerates, and color spaces.  Multi-segmented capture (to more than one file) permits captures greater than 4GB, and permits captures to span multiple partitions.  Filters can be applied during capture.  Stop conditions may be configured based on time, file length, or disk space remaining.  There's also a screen-capture option, which is great for creating tutorials and the like.

And basically, it works better with my craptacular old ATI tv-tuner card than any other software I've ever tried, including ATI's own.



xantor posted Mon, 12 February 2007 at 8:07 AM

Filters being applied as it captures sounds great, but I suppose that will be difficult to set up?


Little_Dragon posted Thu, 15 February 2007 at 12:56 AM

No more difficult than applying them to an existing video, actually, but they do chew up additional CPU cycles, which might lead to dropped frames during capture if your machine isn't fast enough.