Geekzone: technology news, blogs, forums
Guest
Welcome Guest.
You haven't logged in yet. If you don't have an account you can register now.




210 posts

Master Geek


Topic # 103516 8-Jun-2012 17:43 Send private message

Hi,

(Please move this if a more appropriate Forum exists)

I've established a DLNA LAN connection between a Panasonic DMR-XW 380 and my PC, using Twonky.

Copying to the PC results in a files ending _BDY.  These play in VLC but rows of horizontal lines show when anything is moving. I haven't been able to convert them to any other format that might play better.
VLC shows the codec details as

Stream 0
Type: Video
Original ID: 450
Codec: H264 - MPEG-4 AVC (part 10) (h264)
Resolution: 1920x1080
Frame rate: 50
Decoded format: Planar 4:2:0 YUV

Stream 1
Type: Audio
Original ID: 400
Codec: MPEG AAC Audio (mp4a)
Language: English
Channels: Stereo
Sample rate: 48000 Hz
AAC extension: SBR

Stream 2
Type: Audio
Original ID: 410
Codec: A52 Audio (aka AC3) (a52 )
Language: English

Has anyone been there-done that and have any ideas or comments ? I have tried converting with tmpGenc 4, but they lose many seconds of sync, and generally play sluggishly, or freeze.

Thanks, Kirk




Cheers - Kirk

Create new topic
1534 posts

Uber Geek

Subscriber

  Reply # 637983 8-Jun-2012 18:45 Send private message

The video you are watching is in 1080i format.
The i in 1080i signifies that the video is interlaced. 
See wikipedia for Interlaced info - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interlaced_video

This is what is causing the horizontal lines during motion.

To stop this from happening, try playing around with the De-interlacing settings in VLC. Under the Video menu.
I think "Blend" is the most commonly used setting/filter.

Hope this helps.
:)



210 posts

Master Geek


  Reply # 638103 9-Jun-2012 01:27 Send private message

Fabulous!  Many thanks for that...  what an improvement !  I had to also turn Deinterlace ON, and I think Discard is slightly better than Blend.  Now to find some way to edit and  save as m2ts without degradation.

May be a bridge too far, but will be fun looking!   Thanks again :)




Cheers - Kirk

518 posts

Ultimate Geek


  Reply # 638114 9-Jun-2012 07:17 Send private message

TVNZ (and later TV3) switched to 1080i from 720p (progressive) just becuase 1080 sounds higher than 720.
People wanted (Full HD) so TVNZ gave them 1080 lines, but interlaced.  

The problem is that 1080 lines interlaced looks worse than 720 lines progressive. And there is not enough space on Freeview|HD to broadcast 1080p without heavy compression. You will find discussions on this forum when TVNZ made the switch, and everyone moaning.





16856 posts

Uber Geek

Moderator
Trusted
Biddle Corp
Subscriber

  Reply # 638158 9-Jun-2012 10:44 Send private message

TV3 had always broadcast in 1080i, it was just TV1 and TV2 that were 720p originally.





*Need help configuring your Linksys ATA or IP Phones for New Zealand? Check my blog post

518 posts

Ultimate Geek


  Reply # 638159 9-Jun-2012 10:45 Send private message

Whoops, didn't have Freeview|HD then.






210 posts

Master Geek


  Reply # 638226 9-Jun-2012 13:27 Send private message

naggyman: TVNZ (and later TV3) switched to 1080i from 720p (progressive) just becuase 1080 sounds higher than 720.
People wanted (Full HD) so TVNZ gave them 1080 lines, but interlaced.  

The problem is that 1080 lines interlaced looks worse than 720 lines progressive.


Didn't know that, typical I suppose. But TV and Freeview will become more and more insignificant as we find alternatives. So the only way to see full Hi Def is from a Blu Ray disk?  Anything on, or coming via satellite?




Cheers - Kirk

16856 posts

Uber Geek

Moderator
Trusted
Biddle Corp
Subscriber

  Reply # 638237 9-Jun-2012 14:07 Send private message

Full HD isn't broadcast anywhere in the world routinely, simply because the bandwidth required is too great.





*Need help configuring your Linksys ATA or IP Phones for New Zealand? Check my blog post

Create new topic





Twitter »
Follow us to receive Twitter updates when new discussions are posted in our forums:



Follow us to receive Twitter updates when news items and blogs are posted in our frontpage:



Follow us to receive Twitter updates when new jobs are posted to our jobs board:



Follow us to receive Twitter updates when tech item prices are listed in our price comparison site:




News »

Trending now »
Hot discussions in our forums right now:

Sky outbid for EPL rights (Premier League Pass discussion)
Created by JonnyCam, last reply by JarrodM on 20-Jun-2013 18:11 (290 replies)
Pages... 18 19 20


Orcon Genius Go discussion
Created by freitasm, last reply by ronw on 20-Jun-2013 17:32 (97 replies)
Pages... 5 6 7


I am been sued - HELP!
Created by BaaaaD, last reply by NZCrusader on 20-Jun-2013 15:48 (75 replies)
Pages... 3 4 5


Condenser Dryer: anyone has one?
Created by joker97, last reply by graemew on 18-Jun-2013 21:08 (31 replies)
Pages... 2 3


Slingshot Global Mode announced
Created by freitasm, last reply by richms on 20-Jun-2013 17:58 (59 replies)
Pages... 2 3 4


Slow YouTube Response
Created by SneakerPimps, last reply by mercutio on 18-Jun-2013 21:34 (23 replies)
Pages... 2


Sky News UK now streaming on Apple TV
Created by steve98, last reply by jarledb on 20-Jun-2013 12:00 (19 replies)
Pages... 2


Calling all mazda 3/Axela owners in NZ
Created by coolcat21, last reply by Kingy on 19-Jun-2013 09:51 (37 replies)
Pages... 2 3



Geekzone Jobs »
Most recent NZ jobs in technology:

Mobile Developer - iOS
Posted 20-Jun-2013 16:38

Systems Administrator
Posted 20-Jun-2013 16:38

Senior SharePoint Developer
Posted 20-Jun-2013 16:38

Mobile Developer - Android
Posted 20-Jun-2013 16:38

B2B Service Executive
Posted 20-Jun-2013 15:38

Systems Administrator
Posted 20-Jun-2013 15:38

Solutions Architect
Posted 20-Jun-2013 15:38


Geekzone Live »
Try automatic live updates from Geekzone directly in your browser, without refreshing the page, with Geekzone Live now.

Are you subscribed to our RSS feed? You can download the latest headlines and summaries from our stories directly to your computer or smartphone by using a feed reader.

Alternatively, you can receive a daily email with Geekzone updates.