Date: Mon, 9 Jun 2008 07:20:32 -0400 From: "Jim Stapleton" <stapleton.41@gmail.com> To: rick-freebsd@kiwi-computer.com Cc: freebsd-multimedia@freebsd.org Subject: Re: pvrxxx recording Message-ID: <80f4f2b20806090420v773c6889oa08647fbb338a570@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <20080606054908.GA97300@keira.kiwi-computer.com> References: <80f4f2b20805290402w84c3f4k3f302385396b6b1c@mail.gmail.com> <20080529170858.GA70632@keira.kiwi-computer.com> <80f4f2b20805301548x2e5e55d2g32267504797ffcdb@mail.gmail.com> <20080601064100.GB13314@keira.kiwi-computer.com> <80f4f2b20806051446s7b9b381aid162345771934bbd@mail.gmail.com> <20080606054908.GA97300@keira.kiwi-computer.com>
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> MPEG4 with a lot of options specified. The problem is the CPU overhead >> > real time. The CPU overhead didn't even stress my computer ffmpeg -i /dev/cxm0 -vcodec mpeg4 -acodec mp2 -ac 2 -b 2000 test.avi 75-90% load on one CPU core It gave me the quality I wanted, It fuzzed twice in the first twenty seconds, but after that, it was perfectly fine, video-wise. The only issue was audio sync, and I remember there is something related to formats and keyframes with that one - I just need to use a different audio codec or storage format. Either way, researching that shouldn't take too long. Thanks. -Jim Stapleton
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