Howdy again,
I just got my very first video recording running into the RR-G using PC-VCR 1.52.
Now I'm elsewhere while it's recording, and I've suddenly got this feeling that I'm going to come home to a 9 minute AVI file...!
Does PC-VCR either
- automatically span AVI files to bypass the 2G limit (it told me my max was over 2hrs, so I didn't give it a second thought), or
- have that option somewhere so I won't goof up the next time?
One last general question: does anyone care to share their experience concerning the recording quality? I've fooled with the brightness/contract/hue/sat sliders until I got something that looked OK during preview; then I set the Record Quality slider to max, but for space reasons set the MPEG compression quality to LOW. The AVI test clip still looked OK.
I guess my main question is, why are the color/brightness settings different when the AVI is played back as opposed to during preview mode? What techniques do you people use for a good recording? Any hints?
Sorry for the long-winded post!
Adrian
[This message has been edited by AdrianSchubert (edited 19 April 2000).]
I just got my very first video recording running into the RR-G using PC-VCR 1.52.
Now I'm elsewhere while it's recording, and I've suddenly got this feeling that I'm going to come home to a 9 minute AVI file...!
Does PC-VCR either
- automatically span AVI files to bypass the 2G limit (it told me my max was over 2hrs, so I didn't give it a second thought), or
- have that option somewhere so I won't goof up the next time?
One last general question: does anyone care to share their experience concerning the recording quality? I've fooled with the brightness/contract/hue/sat sliders until I got something that looked OK during preview; then I set the Record Quality slider to max, but for space reasons set the MPEG compression quality to LOW. The AVI test clip still looked OK.
I guess my main question is, why are the color/brightness settings different when the AVI is played back as opposed to during preview mode? What techniques do you people use for a good recording? Any hints?
Sorry for the long-winded post!
Adrian
[This message has been edited by AdrianSchubert (edited 19 April 2000).]
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