Jump to content



0

Using Atari800Win with Fraps


7 replies to this topic

#1 Foebane OFFLINE  

Foebane

    Chopper Commander

  • 129 posts

Posted Mon Dec 5, 2005 8:20 AM

I've tried recording video from Atari800Win with Fraps, but nothing happens. Fraps doesn't seem to recognise the emulator.

I've tried the various codecs on the standard Save Video menu item, but some slow the system to a crawl and others produce files far too big for me. Trouble is, none of them work (at least sound-wise) on the Tsunami MPEG Encoder.

There is a Fraps compressor as one of the codecs, but I can't get it to work. What should I do?

#2 Rybags ONLINE  

Rybags

    Quadrunner

  • 10,316 posts
  • Location:Australia

Posted Mon Dec 5, 2005 9:45 AM

Get hold of the hacked MS-MPEG4 codecs. http://www.dvd-digest.com should have them.

Or, the Divx codec should work as long as your machine is reasonably fast.

Or, one of the freeware ones like HUFFYUV or LL50.

#3 Foebane OFFLINE  

Foebane

    Chopper Commander

  • 129 posts

Posted Mon Dec 5, 2005 10:03 AM

How do I get Atari800Win to work with them? Where should I put them, etc?

#4 Rybags ONLINE  

Rybags

    Quadrunner

  • 10,316 posts
  • Location:Australia

Posted Mon Dec 5, 2005 10:28 AM

Video codecs get integrated into Windows.

They either have an installer that you run, or a .INF file that you Right-click->Install.

Attached File  MSMPEG4.zip   215.38K   46 downloads
Attached File  HuffYUV.zip   14.67K   35 downloads
Attached File  LL50.zip   59.3K   38 downloads

There. Just unzip anywhere, then use right-click method. You'll probably have to restart the emulator to get it to pick them up.

#5 Foebane OFFLINE  

Foebane

    Chopper Commander

  • 129 posts

Posted Mon Dec 5, 2005 1:28 PM

Yes, you're right, they do get integrated into Windows.

The MPEG4 encoder worked fairly well, but I've tried almost all of them, even "full frames uncompressed" (EEK! HD space full!) and received varying results.

The only trouble is, none of the AVI files produced will work with TMPGEnc - the sound always cuts out in the first millisecond of each file.

One MPEG encoder does work - it's the one integrated into Blaze Media Pro - but if you change the resolution from Atari800Win standard to Video CD standard (for maximum compatibility for all DVD players), it doesn't do it smoothly - I end up with these ugly jagged edges.

What could be causing these problems with Atari800Win's Save Video? When I try to use some of the codecs, I get the message "Could not run video streaming for selected driver."

#6 Sheddy OFFLINE  

Sheddy

    Dragonstomper

  • 587 posts
  • Location:UK

Posted Tue Dec 6, 2005 6:50 AM

Have you got "GDI for windows" on the "view" window of Atari800WinPlus ticked?
I couldn't get it to work at all without doing that. Just something to try if you haven't already.

#7 Foebane OFFLINE  

Foebane

    Chopper Commander

  • 129 posts

Posted Tue Dec 6, 2005 11:51 AM

Yes, Sheddy, I had GDI ticked.

I've found a solution of sorts, anyway.

Thanks to Rybags, the MPEG4 encoder works very well, doesn't cause too much slowdown and produces a small file.

Normally, if I then went to TMPGEnc to convert it to an MPEG1 (for Video CD, understand?) I got sound problems.

But just now I used VirtualDub to convert it to a DivX file first, and I got satisfactory results this time.

In fact, I've just now played a short little Blue Max video on my DVD player, which doesn't look perfect, but good enough for me.

If you're all wondering why I'm doing this, it's because I'd like to record the top Atari Demos like Numen and others onto Video CD, so I don't need a computer or an emulator to watch them.

Ta for all your assistance, A8 Peeps!

#8 Foebane OFFLINE  

Foebane

    Chopper Commander

  • 129 posts

Posted Tue Dec 6, 2005 6:23 PM

Hmm, on second thoughts, I've decided A8 Demos aren't good enough to be put on Video CD; and anyway, the results I've had with Numen as a test have been poor: there was masses of artifacting, one image broke up entirely, and for some reason my DVD player ignored the MPG file I created from it.

I've recently created a DVD of Video CD files from PC Windows demos, since they're the only types of demos that are worth putting on disc, but the trouble I've had creating the A8 Demo MPGs outweighs the advantages.

Thanks for the advice, but I'm abandoning the project. Same goes for the Amiga demos, too.




0 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users