Frage von Ralf Kaulisch:Hello,
I have old SVCDs with relevant content (my kids) that I no longer can play. I want these videos to create a DVD. All search and Google gives me no solution that I could understand.
How does it work? Or is there perhaps a "service provider" that this job could take over? Or helps the new Roxio Crunch?
Thank you in advance.
Ralf Kaulisch
Antwort von Bernd E.:
have old SVCDs ... ... I no longer can play ... helps the new Roxio Crunch? What is it? If the CDs are no longer readable? Roxio Crunch is converted to my knowledge only in MPEG4 - and H.264 format, not help you when creating a DVD.
Gruß Bernd E.
Antwort von Ralf Kaulisch:
Nee, Bernd,
SVCD would be readable with the DVD player that can. I have such a device does not (ok, I could buy used). But I have much more concern that the future generation of players with BlueRay and so the old SVCDs do not even read them. And then my children would be movies nothing is more valuable. That is my motivation.
Thank you,
Ralf
Antwort von dieter.adler:
Hello,
I would say the opposite is the case! I do not believe that you still can find a device that does not play S-VCDs!
Nevertheless, we can help you:
On video-DVDs is the video with the MPEG2 codec compresses and hat for PAL (our television system) a fixed vertical Resolutionvon 576 or 288 pixels. Horizontally, it is variable (usually 720, but synonymous 480 or 352 pixels). An S-VCD is synonymous MPEG2 compressed 480x576 and has determined, ie it corresponds to the DVD standard! Basically you just need an authoring program (a program that creates a file structure for the video and DVD on request, a menu) and you can your CDs without having to convert DVD to get.
For low Menudesign what it claims is concerned, I recommend you the "TMPGEnc DVD Author". Just search in Google - it gives them a 30-day trial version for download.
Good luck!
Alex
Antwort von dieter.adler:
... Oh sorry,
I've just seen that you probably work with an Apple test, the "TMPGEnc DVD Author" is for Windows / PC. In the Mac world, I know I do not, sorry. But what about the format I have written, is of course synonymous ...
Greeting
Alex
Antwort von beiti:
An S-VCD is synonymous MPEG2 compressed 480x576 and has determined, ie it corresponds to the DVD standard! Unfortunately not. While the vast majority of DVD players still play 480 x 576 - but for a device that does not play SVCD times, I would be skeptical.
On the DVD Standard:
http://www.videohelp.com/dvd
720 x 576 pixels MPEG2 (Called Full-D1)
704 x 576 pixels MPEG2
352 x 576 pixels MPEG2 (Called Half-D1, same s.the CVD Standard)
352 x 288 pixels MPEG2
352 x 288 pixels MPEG1 (Same s.the VCD Standard)
25 fps *
16:9 Anamorphic (only supported by 720x576)
Antwort von Markus:
Or is there perhaps a "service provider" that this job could take over? Is this option still interesting? To how many SVCDs is it?