What program is best

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  • Toddster
    Junior Member
    Junior Member
    • Jan 2003
    • 2

    What program is best

    Im using flask 3.0 OeExp/Flask Xis Expert Edition. I was using DVDx 2.0. DVDx wont hardly work , It was great at first, Then it went south. Flask is a total waste of time in my opinion. I never got the quality that I did from DVDx. Or I just havent had any luck with it. How do you get this gordianknot program and the manual to it? And is it good for the beginner like me? Any thing that is user freindly would be nice, Something that is stable in Windows XP Home. I have a / pent 4, 2.53 / 1.5 g ddr ram / 2 120 gb hard drives /, 64 gforce4 vid card. The programs I have run already have buried my computer. I mean it was crawling. thanks for looking. And if you can save me from all the hype and recomend some things. Well id be truly greatful.

    Thanks,
    Toddster
  • Enchanter
    Old member
    • Feb 2002
    • 5417

    #2
    One word. GordianKnot.

    Comment

    • Toddster
      Junior Member
      Junior Member
      • Jan 2003
      • 2

      #3
      Downloaded it

      I downloaded gordianknot the ripppac, and the system pack. Is this all I will need? I cant find much in the way of a current manual. So Im unsure. Any sugestions on where to find a complete, current manual? Im interested in VCD & SCVD. I am wanting to back up all my dvd's. By the way thanks alot. I see that you know what your talking about, by all your help in this forum. Thanks for taking time out for me. I am very greatful.

      Thank You
      Toddster

      Comment

      • Enchanter
        Old member
        • Feb 2002
        • 5417

        #4
        Check out the GordianKnot guide by UncasMS, available in this forum itself.

        Any sugestions on where to find a complete, current manual? Im interested in VCD & SCVD.
        I'm not into VCDs unfortunately, so I can't point any specific guide on their creation.Check out VCD Help though.

        With a little modification to the GordianKnot procedures, you should be able to create VCD-compliant MPG files. Make sure that you select VCD-compliant resolution (352x240) and create the Avisynth Script (AVS) file. Load up the AVS file into TMPGEnc and fire up the Wizard (which will greatly aid in creation of various types of MPG files). If you did not follow me, I suggest giving the above site a whirl. Good luck.

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        • Batman
          Lord of Digital Video
          Lord of Digital Video
          • Jan 2002
          • 2317

          #5
          To create svcd's I recommend dvd2svcd. A complete guide is available at doom9.org

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          • Toddster
            Junior Member
            Junior Member
            • Jan 2003
            • 2

            #6
            Thanks alot. Ill try that and post back

            Thank You
            Toddster

            Comment

            • Toddster
              Junior Member
              Junior Member
              • Jan 2003
              • 2

              #7
              Question

              Will gordianknot program produce a copy of a dvd that will play on a home dvd player? It seems to not be answered in the manual clearly.

              Thanks
              Toddster

              Comment

              • khp
                The Other
                • Nov 2001
                • 2161

                #8
                Re: Question

                Originally posted by Toddster
                Will gordianknot program produce a copy of a dvd that will play on a home dvd player?
                No, GordianKnot is for Divx encoding, and you can't play divx files or your DVD player.
                Donate your idle CPU time for something usefull.
                http://folding.stanford.edu/

                Comment

                • Batman
                  Lord of Digital Video
                  Lord of Digital Video
                  • Jan 2002
                  • 2317

                  #9
                  Kiss technologies produces a standalone divx/dvd player. Divx.com has details on divx supported hardware.

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