2010-07-17, 07:06 | Link #1021 | ||
Junior Member
Fansubber
Join Date: Sep 2009
|
Quote:
From the manual: Quote:
|
||
2010-07-17, 08:27 | Link #1022 |
Excessively jovial fellow
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: ISDB-T
Age: 37
|
mkvextract timecodes_v2 wants a track number and a target filename after the source filename, it doesn't write to stdout at all
edit: the original poster already discovered this himself
__________________
|
2010-07-28, 14:50 | Link #1023 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
|
I tried some searches online about this issue but didn't really come up with anything, so I was hoping to get some answers here.
I'm archiving some Anime and muxing the 720p subs into a 1080p file. The 1080p stutters in certain sections with subs on and plays fine with them off. Is there any specific reason that would cause this? I've done this a few times now and haven't encountered this problem. I would appreciate any help, let me know if there is any more detailed information I need to provide and I can also upload the file to MU. |
2010-07-28, 16:26 | Link #1024 | |
Excessively jovial fellow
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: ISDB-T
Age: 37
|
Quote:
either get a better cpu, a faster video decoder or offload video decoding to the graphics card
__________________
|
|
2010-07-28, 19:05 | Link #1025 |
Senior Member
Fansubber
|
Using MPC-HC's subtitle renderer instead of VSFilter can also help a bit, especially if you reduce the maximum texture resolution in the subtitle options. That'll reduce the visual quality of the subs a bit, but they'll cause less stuttering. Enabling sub-picture buffering will help as well, though that can mess with subtitle animation.
|
2010-08-03, 11:25 | Link #1026 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: The wonderful country of Finland^^
|
Um... have a small problem...
I thought I had gotten mkvmerge to work correctly... (had issues with screwed file after muxing until someone suggested to choose 'none' for compression in Extra Options for each track) ...but apparently not... Whenever I try to mux styled subs (ass), it simply disappears from the muxed file. With no errors reported. Unstyled subs (srt) do get muxed though... Also, it only affects a new subtrack to be added, if it's already present in the mkv it will still be there after remux. Don't think it's something wrong with the subfile itself, as it behaves same for every .ass extracted from other encodes that I try to remux back... Additionally, they work perfectly as external subs. commandline Spoiler for commandline:
Spoiler for log:
Spoiler for mmgdebug:
Anime I'm trying to mux Edit; Was able to mux by downgrading to an earlier version (v.3.0.0, picked at random)... But still would be interested why the latest mkvmerge doesn't work?... Last edited by Blanchimont; 2010-08-03 at 12:15. |
2010-08-04, 07:56 | Link #1028 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2008
|
There was a fix related to missing ass tracks. You can try pre-293 or later. Although Fluff is right when he says that Mosu changed quite a few things (notably header removal compression and leaving out elements with standard values) which don't hold any notable benefits for the end user. He does that to force the vendors to support a wider spectrum of the Matroska spec.
|
2010-08-07, 12:05 | Link #1029 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
|
Making sub v2 with xdelta ?
I searched for this , but the link they directed died http://www.srsfkn.biz/2008/11/11/mak...-with-xdelta3/
So if anyone can help me with this , I appreciate your help |
2010-08-07, 16:43 | Link #1030 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Age: 42
|
Quote:
http://schneizel.com/patch.html |
|
2010-12-23, 22:55 | Link #1031 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
|
Post about Caption2ASS by Nagato
How do I tell if: 1) My TS has subtitles and I just can't extract them 2) My TS has no subtitles TSes from TBS seem to have easy to extract subtitles. Which other stations usually air anime with subtitles? |
2010-12-24, 19:57 | Link #1032 | |
Excessively jovial fellow
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: ISDB-T
Age: 37
|
Quote:
2) if it's a satellite channel that isn't NHK-BS2 and c2a doesn't extract anything, it probably doesn't have any, but try specifying the PID manually (use DVBViewer and look for private streams in the program you're interested in; if there is one that's most likely the captions. get its PID (in hex) and pass it to c2a and see if anything happens) Some rules of thumb: - All NHK channels always have captions for anime (I think) - Regional UHF channels (tvk, Chiba, Teletama, etc) usually never have captions - Tokyo MX almost never has captions for its late-night (after midnight) broadcasts but may have them for other stuff - TV Tokyo usually has captions, but not always (late-night programming in particular usually lacks them) - NTV and FujiTV usually have captions - Satellite channels almost never have captions (except NHK-BS2 and BShi, which almost always have them) - If the .ts has been stripped, the captions are probably gone too. Check for private streams with DVBViewer.
__________________
|
|
2011-02-24, 02:22 | Link #1034 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
|
Watch this and read this understanding this. After these you should be able to do simple karaokes. If you want to continue, read this and browse Aegisub forum for example scripts.
This is probably the most simple way to learn. There are no shortcuts and karaokers generally hate spoonfeeding beginners. |
2011-02-24, 07:23 | Link #1035 |
Aegisub dev
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Stockholm, Sweden
Age: 39
|
And to elaborate a bit, applying canned effects can't be said to be "doing karaoke" since a large point of fancy karaoke effects is showing off your own skills. (If you just want to let your viewers know the lyrics, fancy effects aren't needed.)
__________________
|
|
|