Nico Sabbi wrote: > On Thursday 24 July 2008 13:13:51 Tim Farrington wrote: > >> Tobias Stoeber wrote: >> >>> Tim Farrington schrieb: >>> >>>> Can you please give me some guidance as to how to discover >>>> what format is output from the v4l-dvb driver. >>>> >>>> The DVB-T standard is, as I understand it, MPEG2, >>>> however with kaffeine, me-tv, mplayer if I record to a file, >>>> (dump from the raw data stream), >>>> it appears to be stored as a MPEG1 file. >>>> If I use GOPchop, it will not open any of these files, >>>> as it will only open MPEG2 files. >>>> >>> Well if I remember it right, a DVB stream (in MPEG2) is MPEG2-TS >>> and GOPchop will handle MPEG2-PS! >>> >>> Cheers, Tobias >>> >> Hi Tobias, >> Do you mean GOPchop won't open MPEG2-TS? >> >> What I'm after is some tool/means which will accurately display a >> format descriptor for >> a MPEG(x) file/stream. >> >> MPEG2-TS is what is supposed to be the format, but how can I >> discover if it really is? >> >> Regards, >> Tim Farrington >> >> > > www.avidemux.org will open it. > file file.ts should say something about it > > _______________________________________________ > linux-dvb mailing list > linux-dvb@xxxxxxxxxxx > http://www.linuxtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/linux-dvb > > Hi Nico, I was a huge fan of avidemux until about 2 hours ago when I discovered that editing a file caused all sorts of grief with a/v sync. Its doc's tell me to send the file through Projectx first, etc Hence, I was attracted to gopchop. All I would like is an mpeg gui editor which can simply edit a file dumped from my dvb stream. I've tried many such as Cinerra (I think that's its name), but this help from Tobias may give me a clue as to why many of them won't open these files - they are MPEG2-TS and the apps perhaps need MPEG2-PS Regards, Tim Farrington _______________________________________________ linux-dvb mailing list linux-dvb@xxxxxxxxxxx http://www.linuxtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/linux-dvb