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Posted by Rafter on 09/08/06 19:46
Hi Neil
Thanks for the answers.
Following is my revert on your answers:
1)My pocketpc video dimension is 240x320 and I've no idea how to save
these videos in full mode.
2)Where can I download Directshow H263 decoder or a DMO from?
3)I've VirtualDub 1.6.15 and it don't recognize H263 and don play them.
Cheers
Rafter
Neil Smith [MVP Digital Media] wrote:
> On 23 Aug 2006 12:23:25 -0700, "Rafter" <post.epatra@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> >Thanks a lot again Neil :)
> >
> >The process worked indeed.
> >
> >I seek advice on the following:
> >
> >1) avi clips shoot in windows pocket pc don't get enlarged or full
> >screen when I play them on windows media player. Do I've the way to
> >edit,save and play avi videos in full mode ?
>
> Q : What are the original recorded video dimensions ? My veo SD camera
> only records 320x240 "video" (lol) but takes 1280x1024 images....
>
>
> >2) How can I play H263 videos on windows media player 9/10; or suggest
> >a freeware?
>
>
> H263 should play back on Quicktime and probably Real Player. It's one
> of the codecs available to be encapsulated by 3GPP containers.
>
> For WMP playback you'd need a Directshow H263 decoder or a DMO
> ("directX media object") installed, I'm not sure there are that many
> free ones of those about.
>
> Netmeeting uses H263 as part of the video compression, but it's not a
> DirectShow decoder so even though it might show up in your codecs list
> on your PC, it can't be used by WMP for playback of that content.
>
>
> >3) Can I convert H263 to windows media player compatible avi format and
> >how?
>
>
> Dunno. Can VDub read the file ? RTFM on that as I suggested.
>
>
> >4) Why does Philips dvp642k DVD palyer does not play windows pocket pc
> >avi files(rather it shows them as MPEG4) when at the same time player
> >plays avi format dvd movies?
>
>
> Because "AVI" is not a codec format, it's a container format. So an
> AVI can encapsulate many types of video encoded with a range of
> codecs, coincidentally including MPEG4.
>
> At this point you need GSpot to understand more fully the insides of
> any random AVI file you happen to come across :
> http://www.headbands.com/gspot/
>
> Marc Liron's Sherlock program can helpfully list all available codecs
> on your PC : http://www.updatexp.com/sherlock-codec-detective.html
>
> HTH
> Cheers - Neil
> ------------------------------------------------
> Digital Media MVP : 2004-2006
> http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/mvpfaqs
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