I've been into video a lot lately and personally, AVI is my favorite. Well... Actually, DivX. The compression is excellent. I have a CD with Braveheart on it. It's excellent quality even on a monitor, but when viewed through a TV card onto a TV, I don't even notice a difference from my couch. If you go right up to the TV then you can see the pixels, but who really watches movies from a foot or two away? I think we all know how long of a movie Braveheart is and it fits onto a 700 MB CD!!! (overburned of course) I'm probably not answering your question, I'm just saying instead of MPEG 1 or 2, I'd go with MPEG 4 (DivX is MPEG 4 I think, which has a .divx or .avi extension) On Sunday, April 28, 2002 11:49 pm, George Toft wrote: |Let's say my stack of videotapes is growing - not to mention a CD-R is | $0.15 each and a video tape $2.00. I want to record a TV show onto CD | instead of video tape. I have the Hauppage WinTV card. | |I've tried Broadcast2000, with works OK, except that 30 seconds of video |takes up 200MB and there is no audio playback. It's also an AVI file, |not an MPEG. | |What does it take to record video and audio and store it in an MPEG that |xtheater understands? I'm a total digital video newbie and need a gentle |shove in the right direction. | |Thanks in advance. | |George |________________________________________________ |See http://PLUG.phoenix.az.us/navigator-mail.shtml if your mail doesn't | post to the list quickly and you use Netscape to write mail. | |PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us |http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss -- ~Jeff