ffmpegX just went to 0.0.6f. http://homepage.mac.com/WebObjects/FileSharing.woa/wa/ default?user=major4&templatefn=FileSharing1.html&xmlfn=TKDocument.1.xml& sitefn=RootSite.xml&aff=consumer&cty=US&lang=en k On Saturday, February 8, 2003, at 05:53 PM, Dennis R. Cohen wrote: > On 2/8/03 at 10:44 AM, David Thrasher <idave at earthlink.net> transmitted > the following electronic message: > >> This may or may have not been discussed already but does anyone know >> if there's anything available to make a Super Video CD on a Mac? I'd >> like to find a way. I'm currently using Mac OS 9.22 most of the time >> and I also have OS 10.1.5 installed (can't swing Jaguar yet). Toast >> with make 1.0 Video CDs which uses MPEG-1 and looks a little bit worse >> than a VHS videotape recorded in the 6 hour (EP) mode. I've check >> Roxio's website and I've checked the vcdhelp website >> (http://www.vcdhelp.com) but I find no Mac instructions for the Super >> Video CD format (VCD version 2.0). Although you can't put as much on >> each CD, the quality is close to DVD quality (sorry, can't afford to >> do DVDs at this time either) since it uses MPEG-2 files too. Any >> instructions or links would be appreciated. Thanks! >> > > Yes, there are a couple of ways to make SVCDs, but you have a > fundamental misimpression in your post. Super VCDs are MPEG-2 based > encodings and VCD 2.0 is still MPEG-1 based (the major differences > between 2.0 and 1.4 are related to the support files on the disk). > > I make SVCDs coming out of iMovie by exporting to Full Quality DV and > then feeding that to ffmpeg (currently using 0.0.6e), with the output > format set to SVCD NTSC (there's also SVCD PAL). ffmpeg does it's > thing, > calling various tools (such as YUVscaler and mencode) to produce the > MPEG-2 files I desire and the image files to burn in Toast (Multitrack > CD-ROM XA format. > > --Dennis Cohen > iLife Bible (April/May 2003) > iTunes, iPhoto, iMovie, & iDVD Bible > MacOS X Bible