Frank Pitt
December 11th, 2003, 09:45 PM
Does anyone have any good tips for creating Microsoft Windows-based computer software demos to be delivered on DVD (NTSC or NTSC WS)?
I have tried a number of Screencam to AVI programs (@ XGA Resolution) but even on a very fast machine (P4 3.2 HT, 800FSB, 2 GB 800MHZ DDR RAM, ASUS 9800 XT, 10K RPM Serial ATA Drives) still suffer a great deal from dropped frames. Also, when the AVIs are encoded to MPEG2 the text is very garbled and the horizontal lines suffer from a great deal of interlace flicker.
Another thing I tried is outputting the demo via the svideo port on my notebook computer to the Canopus DV (svideo in) capture card. The interlace flicker and dropped frames are eliminated but the text resolution is even worse.
I also don't know what kind of TV & video cables will be used to view it (widescreen, 4/3, composite, svideo, component) so I need to create something that looks reasonable at the lowest common denominator (composite, 4/3).
Has anyone done this to any degree of success? Are there any tips to work around the resolution limitations of NTSC?
Thanks in advance.
Frank.
I have tried a number of Screencam to AVI programs (@ XGA Resolution) but even on a very fast machine (P4 3.2 HT, 800FSB, 2 GB 800MHZ DDR RAM, ASUS 9800 XT, 10K RPM Serial ATA Drives) still suffer a great deal from dropped frames. Also, when the AVIs are encoded to MPEG2 the text is very garbled and the horizontal lines suffer from a great deal of interlace flicker.
Another thing I tried is outputting the demo via the svideo port on my notebook computer to the Canopus DV (svideo in) capture card. The interlace flicker and dropped frames are eliminated but the text resolution is even worse.
I also don't know what kind of TV & video cables will be used to view it (widescreen, 4/3, composite, svideo, component) so I need to create something that looks reasonable at the lowest common denominator (composite, 4/3).
Has anyone done this to any degree of success? Are there any tips to work around the resolution limitations of NTSC?
Thanks in advance.
Frank.