Miro dc30 codec
Quicktime can play them but I just get the audio, no video. Has anyone had any luck converting these files to something that can be played. They are of my kids when they were really young and I don't want to loose them. I have found a couple converters that I thought might work but they were intel based so no go for me. Any help would sure be appreciated! Posted on Apr 20, AM. Page content loaded. Apr 21, AM in response to jmsronan In response to jmsronan.
Apr 21, AM. Apr 21, AM in response to andrech In response to andrech. Thanks for the help. Didn't work though. Same thing. Audio is fine but no video. There must be others out there that have these same files, there were not that many capture options out there back in and Miro was one of the bigger players. Qtime must have supported the codec at one time or supported the driver. The files I have are Qtime files. Frustrating to be sure.
Jun 6, PM in response to jmsronan In response to jmsronan. I backed everything up to CD thinking I was doing just that, only to find out that the codec is needed in order to play the Quicktime file. Very frustrating considering I can hear everything, just can't see it. I was wondering if you had any luck resolving this issue. If a response here is not possible, you can find me on twitter under the same screen name. Jun 6, PM. I am hoping that I have a copy of the Codec on one of those disks.
Actually , but is simpler to use for calculations. We thus want bits per block; times becomes bits; bytes per field. Those sum up to bytes per frame, and one of those frames goes into each buffer. But wait a second! This is what the driver notice and automatically compensate for in your examples. In this buffer, we want to store two fields, which leaves bytes for each field. Using blocks per field, we get The -q50 option is silently overridden, and the -b option takes precedence, leaving us with the equivalence of -q This gives us a data rate of bits per block, which, times , sums up to bytes per field, out of the allowed Personally, I think I would have lowered requested-bits-per-block by one, or something like that.
And PAL, and pixels width…. The third example is limited to -q24 through the same process. The second example, using very similar calculations, is limited to -q The only example that actually grab at the specified -q value is the last one, which is clearly visible, looking at the file size.
Check that your mainboard is favorable see question 2 and if not, test the card in another computer. Also provide the dmesg output at high verbosity. The Linux Kernel 5. Media Subsystem Profile 2. Video4Linux devices 3. Remote Controller devices 5. Media Controller devices 6. CEC Kernel Support 7. Pixel data transmitter and receiver drivers 8. Writing camera sensor drivers 9. Media driver-specific documentation 9. Video4Linux V4L drivers 9.
Media driver-specific documentation » 9. The Zoran driver View page source. Additional notes for software developers: The driver returns maxwidth and maxheight parameters according to the current TV standard norm. Concerning buffer sizes, quality, output size etc.
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