Anyone know if the videos that MythTV records are editiable in EMC9?
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MythTV - Recorded videos editiable in EMC9 MythTV - Are the recorded videos editiable in EMC9?
#2
Posted 28 April 2007 - 03:59 AM
It's hard to say whether or not it van be. After all, MythTV uses Video4Linux and is a Linux system.
Why not use K3B or the Gnome programs to do it in Linux?
Why not use K3B or the Gnome programs to do it in Linux?
If it ain't broke, fiddle with it until it breaks, then fiddle with it until you get it fixed
"Rincewind could scream for mercy in nineteen languages and just scream in another forty-four "
"If computers get too powerful, we can organize them into a committee; that will do them in."
“Computers have enabled people to make more mistakes faster than almost any invention in history, with the possible exception of tequila and hand guns.” — Mitch Ratcliffe
Daithi
Home Brew computer
Intel I7 950 on Gigabyte X58A UD3R mobo
12 GB Three Channel DDRAM
Radeon HD4850 512 MB GDR3 graphics
Signalink USB Audio Codec for ham radio connection
1 x 160 GB, 1 x 330 GB, 1 x 400 GB IDE drives
4 x 250 GB SATA 2
LG HL-DT-ST GGW-H20L BD-RE drive
22" Acer P223W monitor
EMC 7.5 on Windows XP 32 SP3
EMC10 on Windows XP64 SP2
Creator 2011 on Windows 7 Ultimate
ECD6 on Gentoo Linux (running under VMWare)
"Rincewind could scream for mercy in nineteen languages and just scream in another forty-four "
"If computers get too powerful, we can organize them into a committee; that will do them in."
“Computers have enabled people to make more mistakes faster than almost any invention in history, with the possible exception of tequila and hand guns.” — Mitch Ratcliffe
Daithi
Home Brew computer
Intel I7 950 on Gigabyte X58A UD3R mobo
12 GB Three Channel DDRAM
Radeon HD4850 512 MB GDR3 graphics
Signalink USB Audio Codec for ham radio connection
1 x 160 GB, 1 x 330 GB, 1 x 400 GB IDE drives
4 x 250 GB SATA 2
LG HL-DT-ST GGW-H20L BD-RE drive
22" Acer P223W monitor
EMC 7.5 on Windows XP 32 SP3
EMC10 on Windows XP64 SP2
Creator 2011 on Windows 7 Ultimate
ECD6 on Gentoo Linux (running under VMWare)
#3
Posted 28 April 2007 - 08:51 AM
As long as MythTV records to a format supported - like MPEG 2 - you shouldn't have a problem.
Phenom X4 965 3.4Ghz, 4gig DDR3, LG 47" 3D TV, Hitachi 1TB HD, Seagate 500GB, LiteOn iHBS112 Bluray, TSSTCorp SH-222A DVD, ATI HD3300 IGP, VIA HiDef audio with Logitech Z5500 THX certified 5.1 speakers, Epson 4490 scanner, Canon 9000Pro MarkII printer, Sharp AL1551CS laser printer/copier, Sony TRV740 8mm digital, Canon HV20 HDV camcorder and Fuji S7000 for still photos, Win7 Home Premium
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System 2: HP DV7 laptop, Turion II Dual Core 2.4Ghz, 4GB RAM, 640GB hard drive, ATI Mobility HD4650, ATI HiDef Audio, Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit.
Gary Russell
TNUSA
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System 2: HP DV7 laptop, Turion II Dual Core 2.4Ghz, 4GB RAM, 640GB hard drive, ATI Mobility HD4650, ATI HiDef Audio, Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit.
Gary Russell
TNUSA
#4
Posted 28 April 2007 - 07:41 PM
I'm new to Linux and only run it under VirtualPC - just to get experience. I think it has K3B on it, or some type of DVD program. I should play around with it.
A coworker told me about MythTV and that he has built two of them. I'm planning on building one myself. MythTV is a (free) programmable DVR much like (sounds like Kivo). Completly customizable since you build it on a standard Linux platform. You can add as many TV turners as you feel you need, and as big a hard drive (s) as you want. It has a (free) TV schuduler, database, DVD editing program, DVD builder/burner. It also can be controled via standard ir remotes. It has a Mame interface (cool). A few wireless gamepads and you got an awsome system. Lots of other features. It's one of the coolest things I've seen in a while. Amazing.
There's also a KnoppixMythTV - It's a one image Linux/MythTV install.
MythTV home page: http://www.mythtv.org
A coworker told me about MythTV and that he has built two of them. I'm planning on building one myself. MythTV is a (free) programmable DVR much like (sounds like Kivo). Completly customizable since you build it on a standard Linux platform. You can add as many TV turners as you feel you need, and as big a hard drive (s) as you want. It has a (free) TV schuduler, database, DVD editing program, DVD builder/burner. It also can be controled via standard ir remotes. It has a Mame interface (cool). A few wireless gamepads and you got an awsome system. Lots of other features. It's one of the coolest things I've seen in a while. Amazing.
There's also a KnoppixMythTV - It's a one image Linux/MythTV install.
MythTV home page: http://www.mythtv.org
#5
Posted 29 April 2007 - 04:32 AM
You'll find that running Linux in a shell under Windows isn't doing it justice (it slows everything down)
On my machine I have the main hard drive partitioned, with Windows on the first partition an Gentoo Linux on the second (Gentoo isn't recommended btw unless you're really into Linux) but you can get a LiveCD from www.gentoo.org that will run from boot - obviously you won't be able to save anything but it's a good way yo come to grips with the Linux shell and X Windows.
You say you're running Kubuntu in a virtual machine. You will still have a problem actually moving the MythTV files. The Linux kernel will not write to NTFS2 (it will to FAT, FAT32 and the older NTFS usewd on NT4, but not to the NTFS on Windows 2000 or XP) and Windows doesn't even know that ext2, ext3 or ReiserFS even exist
On my machine I have the main hard drive partitioned, with Windows on the first partition an Gentoo Linux on the second (Gentoo isn't recommended btw unless you're really into Linux) but you can get a LiveCD from www.gentoo.org that will run from boot - obviously you won't be able to save anything but it's a good way yo come to grips with the Linux shell and X Windows.
You say you're running Kubuntu in a virtual machine. You will still have a problem actually moving the MythTV files. The Linux kernel will not write to NTFS2 (it will to FAT, FAT32 and the older NTFS usewd on NT4, but not to the NTFS on Windows 2000 or XP) and Windows doesn't even know that ext2, ext3 or ReiserFS even exist
If it ain't broke, fiddle with it until it breaks, then fiddle with it until you get it fixed
"Rincewind could scream for mercy in nineteen languages and just scream in another forty-four "
"If computers get too powerful, we can organize them into a committee; that will do them in."
“Computers have enabled people to make more mistakes faster than almost any invention in history, with the possible exception of tequila and hand guns.” — Mitch Ratcliffe
Daithi
Home Brew computer
Intel I7 950 on Gigabyte X58A UD3R mobo
12 GB Three Channel DDRAM
Radeon HD4850 512 MB GDR3 graphics
Signalink USB Audio Codec for ham radio connection
1 x 160 GB, 1 x 330 GB, 1 x 400 GB IDE drives
4 x 250 GB SATA 2
LG HL-DT-ST GGW-H20L BD-RE drive
22" Acer P223W monitor
EMC 7.5 on Windows XP 32 SP3
EMC10 on Windows XP64 SP2
Creator 2011 on Windows 7 Ultimate
ECD6 on Gentoo Linux (running under VMWare)
"Rincewind could scream for mercy in nineteen languages and just scream in another forty-four "
"If computers get too powerful, we can organize them into a committee; that will do them in."
“Computers have enabled people to make more mistakes faster than almost any invention in history, with the possible exception of tequila and hand guns.” — Mitch Ratcliffe
Daithi
Home Brew computer
Intel I7 950 on Gigabyte X58A UD3R mobo
12 GB Three Channel DDRAM
Radeon HD4850 512 MB GDR3 graphics
Signalink USB Audio Codec for ham radio connection
1 x 160 GB, 1 x 330 GB, 1 x 400 GB IDE drives
4 x 250 GB SATA 2
LG HL-DT-ST GGW-H20L BD-RE drive
22" Acer P223W monitor
EMC 7.5 on Windows XP 32 SP3
EMC10 on Windows XP64 SP2
Creator 2011 on Windows 7 Ultimate
ECD6 on Gentoo Linux (running under VMWare)
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