TPE avec Avistep
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Eistein1 Posted messages 1 Registration date Status Member Last intervention -
Eistein1 Posted messages 1 Registration date Status Member Last intervention -
Hello,
I am doing a research project that requires the use of software such as Avistep, Aviméca, Regressi but although my videos (taken with a Nikon D3200 and in .mov format) have been converted to .avi and are playable by the Windows Media Player, the software cannot read my videos. What should I do? Do you have any advice or compatible converters to suggest for these programs?
I am doing a research project that requires the use of software such as Avistep, Aviméca, Regressi but although my videos (taken with a Nikon D3200 and in .mov format) have been converted to .avi and are playable by the Windows Media Player, the software cannot read my videos. What should I do? Do you have any advice or compatible converters to suggest for these programs?
2 answers
Hello,
According to this site: http://www.physique-appliquee.net/tice/tutoriels/avimeca/Tutoriel_Avimeca.html
The two files provided as examples are encoded, the first with the Cinepack codec and the second with MS-Video.
Perhaps try doing it in DV, Huffyuv, or Lagarith, or even with Sorenson Spark, or perhaps without compression, or maybe in MJPEG. In short, testing is necessary and I absolutely suggest avoiding DivX/XviD in my opinion.
However, it is mentioned that the software would accept DivX 4: http://ww3.ac-poitiers.fr/sc_phys/cres_lr/Meca/videos.htm
You can also find other test files like here that are encoded in PCM, Cinepack, or with Indeo 4: http://ww3.ac-poitiers.fr/sc_phys/cres_lr/Meca/videos.htm
I suppose it should be the same for Regressi.
In this discussion, another one that I do not know is suggested: https://forums.commentcamarche.net/forum/affich-6464727-pilotes-pour-avimeca#q=avimeca&cur=1&url=%2F
I also responded to a similar request here: https://forums.commentcamarche.net/forum/affich-11211752-sequence-video-avi-xvid-pour-avimeca
Best regards
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According to this site: http://www.physique-appliquee.net/tice/tutoriels/avimeca/Tutoriel_Avimeca.html
The two files provided as examples are encoded, the first with the Cinepack codec and the second with MS-Video.
Perhaps try doing it in DV, Huffyuv, or Lagarith, or even with Sorenson Spark, or perhaps without compression, or maybe in MJPEG. In short, testing is necessary and I absolutely suggest avoiding DivX/XviD in my opinion.
However, it is mentioned that the software would accept DivX 4: http://ww3.ac-poitiers.fr/sc_phys/cres_lr/Meca/videos.htm
You can also find other test files like here that are encoded in PCM, Cinepack, or with Indeo 4: http://ww3.ac-poitiers.fr/sc_phys/cres_lr/Meca/videos.htm
I suppose it should be the same for Regressi.
In this discussion, another one that I do not know is suggested: https://forums.commentcamarche.net/forum/affich-6464727-pilotes-pour-avimeca#q=avimeca&cur=1&url=%2F
I also responded to a similar request here: https://forums.commentcamarche.net/forum/affich-11211752-sequence-video-avi-xvid-pour-avimeca
Best regards
--
Long live Bobo! ~ Little fish will grow big ~
Hello
The best solution I found to solve the problem of reading video files (Avi) with the Avistep software is to install the Windows 7 codecs (Win7codecs-4.1.3): https://www.commentcamarche.net/telecharger/tv-video/23907-windows-7-codecs/ .
Best regards
The best solution I found to solve the problem of reading video files (Avi) with the Avistep software is to install the Windows 7 codecs (Win7codecs-4.1.3): https://www.commentcamarche.net/telecharger/tv-video/23907-windows-7-codecs/ .
Best regards
I would like to thank you for your response, however my problem is still not resolved and when I try to launch one of my previously converted videos, the following message appears: "video unavailable, can't find the decompressor 'vids:H264'" on aviméca and "cannot open this video, check that the file is not damaged" on regressi. Yet they open normally. Do you have a solution? I am really desperate...
But since this is not certain (H264/AVC should not be supported as they are "old" software), it is essential to stick to the codecs and containers natively supported by these two applications, meaning that the file should be in AVI format and with codecs such as Cinepack and MS-Video plus a few others, and to test MJPEG, or uncompressed.
Try using XMedia Recode or SUPER, or perhaps Format Factory but I have doubts about the latter, to re-encode your file. I haven't checked, but I think these software programs should offer at least one of these codecs.