Dramatically accelerates video encoding when the hardware encoder is used with Mac applications such as iMovie®, QuickTime® Pro, Final Cut® Pro, and EyeTV®. Incredibly fast and easy to use:Ĭomes with intuitive software and converts videos at amazing speeds. Select from a range of presets or add your own video output profiles. Suitable for pros as well as novices:Ĭrop, scale, trim, batch process, and easily merge multiple clips into one movie. Turbo.264 HD automatically detects AVCHD camcorders. Preview and move HD camcorder movies to your Mac or iPod in one fast and easy step. The best way to transfer HD camcorder video to a Mac: H.264 video is a universal format that can be played on iPod, iPhone, Apple TV, gaming consoles, selected smartphones, and on the web. Drag and drop any video file into the application and convert it to a high-quality H.264 file in standard or HD resolutions. Then I got a Hauppauge HD-PVR and quit doing all that crap.Turbo.264 HD converts HD video to the universal H.264 format. It's been quite a few years since I had to deal with raw MPEG2, and I've basically forgotten what I did with it back then (the video was extracted from a hacked HDTivo, and best I can recal I converted the massive MPEG files to Divx. All youse guys slummin' the quality (but not quantity!) with cable or satellite could use more compression as more data has already been lost. This is for broadcast which uses higher bitrates to begin with. Don't forget to deinterlace your 1080i content and convert the audio to at least 192 kbps AAC stereo or 384 kbps for 5.1! I'm patient and use higher quality settings - try RF22 or do 2-pass with a 5-7000 kbps setting for 1080 or 3-5kbps for 720p. Say you don't want to use the QT component (which I don't - I want smaller files with similar quality). MPEG2! EyeTV does not change anything, it merely records the raw stream from the source, so quit yer complainin'! If you want to watch that file, then buy the QT MPEG component. The reason it's a MPEG2 file is because it's transmitted in. Here is how I archive EyeTV recordings to watch later:Įxport from EyeTV. Imma a little late but I wanted you all to finish. Just looking to toss these on an SD card so that a friend can see them (guessing he has a generic windows machine of some sort.) I ended up with mp4 files, with the larger being reduced by about half to 5.79 GB, and the smaller as well to about 1.6 GB- neither look terribly good when playing (very obvious quality hit) and the smaller one is showing as "protected MPEG-4 movie" under file type (huh?) I had two files- one was a 90 minute TV episode and one was a 30 minutes episode. So I tried again, selecting h264 option, and went to bed. I tried to export from the application via export command, choosing 1080p, but got files that nothing could play (in retrospect I think they hadn't completed after several hours, but the application gives you no indication whatsoever of the progress of an export, and the icon was complete.) I examined the package contents of an EyeTV video and tried to isolate the MPEG component but it wouldn't play on anything. Jeebus, why does this aspect of EyeTV suck so badly?
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |