On Monday 09 February 2004 9:44 am, Vaughn Treude wrote: > > I purchased an NEC (model number escapes me, I'm at work) for home us= e > > and EMR purchased a Pioneer A-05. Both installed and burn under Redh= at > > 8/9 with no issues whatsoever. Neither came with any other hardware = but > > the drive. Both are internal. Both ran about $150. > > Good! Since DVD burners are becoming so widespread, I figured that Lin= ux > would probably support most major brands. But it's also my > understanding that you can't convert analog video to digital without > special hardware, either integrated from the drive or separate. Most o= f > the promotional info for the drives say you can use them to copy home > videos, but I'm assuming that they're assuming the person has a digital > video camera. Which brings me to my second question: have any of you u= sed > video capture hardware under Linux? Not sure what you mean 'analog' versus' digital video, since it is all st= ored=20 digitally on the hard drive, no matter the source. Analog is the storage= =20 medium of any 'traditional' tape, such as VHS-C.=20 When putting video from your Hard Drive onto a DVD-Video disk, if you wis= h=20 that video to be played back from a traditional hardware DVD player, the=20 video must be formatted in a way that the DVD Player will understand. Th= e=20 original format (for NTSC, if you don't know what this means, you want NT= SC=20 if you are here in America) being MPEG-2 at 340x252 or 720x480, with eith= er=20 AC3 or PCM audio, depending on the quality and "amount per disk" you are=20 trying to achieve. Also, the older the DVD player, most chunks or 'chapt= ers'=20 must be under 1 gig in size. As long as you can store your 'analog' video on your hard drive as Mpeg 2= (or=20 convert it after the fact) you can then move that content to a DVD-Video=20 Disk. The newer the player and depending on what formats it supports, you can=20 sometimes create 'bastard' versions of these formats, but your disk will = not=20 be universally readable. For instance, one of my home dvd players suppor= ts=20 MPEG1 video on a DVD-RW (a VERY rare combination) so I can transfer up to= =20 about 6 hours of recorded TV to that DVDRW to enjoy later, especially if = I am=20 not looking to archive that particular content (hence the RW). --=20 Kyle Faber Account Manager EMR Internet kyle@emr.net 623-581-0842 voice 623-582-9499 fax UNIX is a registered trademark of The Open Group in the United States and= =20 other countries.