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Metatron

User Group
Members
Join date
23-Apr-2006
Last activity
29-Sep-2014
Posts
9

Post History

Post
#208895
Topic
Help: looking for... Star Wars Fan Film Awards Special
Time

By any chance does someone have a copy of the Star Wars Fan Film Awards Special, I’ve searched here and torrent sites but can’t find it, I could be blind and/or stupid and just not be too good at finding things, if that’s the case it would be great if someone would point me in the right direction, otherwise it would be great if anyone who had it could share it. So many other specials were put on DVD, even ones that didn’t really deserve it, like some of the stupid mtv ones, and as a big Star Wars and Kevin Smith fan, I think this title truly deserves it. If any one has a capture of it and doesn’t feel like editing out comercials and authoring it with menus etc., if you could get it to me I would take care of all of that and upload it as a torrent, thanx!

Post
#207210
Topic
ORIGINAL STAR WARS TRILOGY OUT 09/2006 BY LUCASFILM
Time
I'm confused, if he's announced these and we won, how come the main page hasn't changed, why is the petition still there, why isn't it being blasted on the main page that we won the battle? Also has anyone considered editing a small clip, taking the celebration from the end of rotj (the original celebration ofcourse) and replacing the ghosts with DVD cases sporting the fact that they are the oot or something interesting to that affect?
Post
#205952
Topic
KVCD
Time

Well I neither have the equipment nor the laserdiscs needed to make my own transfer. But what I have heard is that when captured onto the hardrive the video file is about 20 gigs (i don't know if this is true, i have never attempted a transfer). When converting this video file to the target dvd-sized mpeg using any normal method you lose a lot of data, when doing it with the K method you lose a lot of data as well, but hopefully it is a lot less noticeable. I would try it myself but don't have said huge video file (or as I mentioned the means of making one myself) so if someone is willing to send me one of their transfers BEFORE it was encoded to dvd, when it's in that 20gb or so range, I would be more than happy to test it out. If someone can send me multi-part .rar files of the transfer spread across a few dvds I would be more than happy to pay for shipping and price of discs. I'm incredibly anxious just to see if it would work, I may even get one of my friends in the release group I mentioned to give it a go since it kinda takes a talent and I don't have nearly as much experience as them!

Post
#205637
Topic
KVCD
Time
I think I may have been too vague on my description the first time I'm glad you posted so I could clear it up for anyone else who might have tought the same way. I bring a lot of knowledge from other areas on this subject of preservations and fan edits, but some things I just don't know from lack of experience. I have never used CCE and they make no mention of it on kvcd.net so I suposse if it uses the same templates then it may work, otherwise I just don't know.
Post
#205630
Topic
KVCD
Time
The point of the post was not to suggest that people convert to KVCD but to use KDVD. If you can fit almost 6 hours of DVD video on a standard 4.7 gig DVDr that will play in all stand-alone DVD players using the KDVD templates they provide for TMPGEnc then using the same template to put a 2 and a half hour laserdisc transfer (uncompressed and possibly upscaled depending on how you do your captures) on a dual-layer DVD would provide much, much, much greater quality (so much so that I can't even begin to describe it) than what we are presented with now!
Post
#205615
Topic
KVCD
Time
It blows my mind that none of you have ever heard of this or if you have, never mentioned it on the website or used it in your transfers. I can verify that everything the following paragraphs say are true because I've seen DVDs transferred to a CD with no loss of quality because of this:
What is KVCD?
"K Video Compression Dynamics"

KVCD is a modification to the standard MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 GOP structure and Quantization Matrix. It enables you to create over 120 minutes of near DVD quality video, depending on your material, on a single 80 minute CD-R/CD-RW. We have published these specifications as KVCDx3, our official resolution, which produce 528x480 (NTSC) and 528x576 (PAL) MPEG-1 variable bit rate video, from 64Kbps to 3,000Kbps. Using a resolution of 352x240 (NTSC) or 352x288 (PAL), it's possible to encode video up to ~360 minutes of near VCD quality on a single 80 minute CD-R. The mpeg files created will play back in most modern standalone DVD players. You must burn the KVCD MPEG files as non-standard VCD or non-standard SVCD (depends on your player) with Nero or VCDEasy.

Using KVCD parameters to create DVDs (KDVD), will enable you to create 100% DVD compliant MPEG-2 streams, capable of playing on any standard DVD player. This will allow you to put up to about 6 hours Full D-1 720x480 on one DVD, or about 10 hours at Half D-1 352x480.

^The above was taken from www.kvcd.net and it is absolutely true. If you want to know more about it do a search for KVCD, KWAG, or KDVD. If you want proof that its as good as it says it is go to www.trovando.it a very amazing search engine where you can search all other search engines and torrent sites. Search the torrent sites for KVCDs from a release group called The Usual Suspects, it should have TUS in the title somehwere, download one of their movies (make sure it's a DVD-rip or you won't be getting DVD quality) and burn it to CD, watch it in you dvd player and be amazed by the quality. I wanted to keep it a secret for when I made my own laserdisc transfers but I'm lazy and never finish any of my projects so i figured I would let all of the hard working folks here know about it because I have seen a few of the transfers and it seems that a lot of quality is lost when converting it to DVD. If you use TMPGEnc to encode videos they also have the templates for you to download on that site at http://kvcd.net/dvd-models.html ENJOY!!!