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Sheepshaver enlarge drive
Sheepshaver enlarge drive






sheepshaver enlarge drive
  1. #Sheepshaver enlarge drive how to#
  2. #Sheepshaver enlarge drive for mac os#
  3. #Sheepshaver enlarge drive movie#
  4. #Sheepshaver enlarge drive install#
  5. #Sheepshaver enlarge drive windows 10#

my 3mb sample was 5 seconds long with no audio from an mpeg1 or mpeg2 source online.

#Sheepshaver enlarge drive install#

if you can recommend a gui I could install for it, that would be phenomenal! this way, I can hopefully run your script in a familiar environment and try some encoding on it, the smaller the better. afaik, ffmeg is command-line based with optional 3rd-party gui interfaces. I've always preferred using a gui since you get drop-downs, buttons and other input fields. and last slight OT - this how video codec using vector quantization looks on plain MC68000 with 7.16MHz clock (audio is compressed also) - funny that sound and video was stored on floppy disk 880KB big - demo runs on 512KB unexpanded Amiga A500 and it is children SAFE till 2:50

sheepshaver enlarge drive

Also there was some multimedia converter at least on Amiga and Windows called 'MainActor' it may support Cinepak encoding too.ītw - i tested script and average bitrate was less than 500kbpps.

sheepshaver enlarge drive

If i recall correctly 'Quicktime 4 PRO' (QT4 PRO was pay version with support conversion on Windows and usually unlocked by keygen) - so you can search for some old QT4 with keygen and try to run it. You can freely modify my script also if you have questions about script don't hesitate to ask - personally believe that it squeeze maximum from ffmpeg (both on video and audio).ĪFAIR Microsoft has own vector quantization video codec called 'Microsoft Video 1' (also available in ffmpeg) - IMHO both provide comparable quality, there was also Intel Indeo codec IMHO delivering highest quality, i remember it was time before big hype of 'Microsoft MPEG-4 Version 3' when i've encoded my first HQ RIP from DVB (Star Wars Part 4) and i decided to use Indeo 5 codec.Ĭinepak thread triggered my curiosity due Amiga and similarities between Amiga and Macintosh (MC68k ISA used in both machines). Now, I'm kind of curious whether any version of quicktime for windows ever converted videos to the cinepak mov format as well. Funny, cinepak was used a lot by microsoft in the early nineties, which is why I imagined there would have been a slew of old tools of that period that could encode that video format!

#Sheepshaver enlarge drive movie#

I was a tiny bit surprised older video tools like windows movie maker and vlc couldn't encode cvid: I was simply expecting too much from them. I enjoy having several options, especially if I can share the easier ones with newbie encoders who may otherwise end up in the weeds with a complicated encoding technique.

#Sheepshaver enlarge drive how to#

the input file was under 800k and the output file was around 3mb, so I'll play with it a little more until I can get good at running scripts again, maybe view some YT tuts on how to do that.Īll in all, I feel quite accomplished, at least in figuring out how to encode a video file and if I figure out any other fool-proof encoding methods, I'll post them on here! both installers checked out on virustotal, probably the one good thing I did do, and so far no issues on my end. The clip I converted had no audio, but the video encoded in cinepak and played on my emu quite well, yeah! It only required me to install quicktime, another not good idea on windows, so I located quicktime lite 4.1.0, which is the one it recommended. It's called MPEG Streamclip and the gui is simple enough to set your parameters.

#Sheepshaver enlarge drive for mac os#

I followed my own advice, usually not a good idea, lol, and I hunted down a windows video converter that works with quicktime 7, similar to using quicktime for mac os x.

#Sheepshaver enlarge drive windows 10#

I encoded my first successful cinepak mov video in windows 10 Don't judge, I love simple!īut in all fairness, I enjoy having several options, especially if I can share the easier ones with newbie encoders who may otherwise end up in the weeds with a complicated encoding technique. At some point back then I ended up switching to fairuse wizard for simplicity sake. I remember using VirtualDub when I was backing up some of my dvds to 700mb avis on cd-r discs and I probably used it as I tried out other video tools. Far off, I recall something about scripts. I was having trouble remembering trying to figure out the way VirtualDub works again.








Sheepshaver enlarge drive