CD & DVD AVI To MPEG4

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not really a burning question as such but I was to convert an avi to mpeg4 to put on usb mem stick
got a lcd that has a usb socket and plays mpeg4 files
says so in the manual anyways lol

Ive tried WinAVI MP4 Converter but when inserted into tv comes up unsupprted file format

anyone know of a converter that will sort this :)
just thought in mpeg4 format Id get more films on a stick ;)
Ta
 
not really a burning question as such but I was to convert an avi to mpeg4 to put on usb mem stick
got a lcd that has a usb socket and plays mpeg4 files
says so in the manual anyways lol

Ive tried WinAVI MP4 Converter but when inserted into tv comes up unsupprted file format

anyone know of a converter that will sort this :)
just thought in mpeg4 format Id get more films on a stick ;)
Ta
guide and software m8

http://www.sharewareguide.net/artic...-mpeg4-video-with-avi-to-mpeg4-converter.html
 
isnt mpeg4 dvd vob (im not sure) I thought mpeg4 was dvd


convertXtodvd is a great tool for that my anti virus deleted my keygen though ask pm smirnrules hes good at finding stuff : spook :

obviously i was wrong looks a handy tool that davidh will come in handy im sure : shocked2
 
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DVD is MPEG 2, not MPEG 4. MPEG 4 is really an umbrella term for a whole load of codecs. Things like XVid, DivX, H263, H264 etc are all various MPEG 4 standards. It's likely you've simply selected the wrong codec. Although I've never seen a TV with this feature, I'd imagine it would play Xvid or DivX files okay. I think there's a setting in WinAVI to set this up. Personally I would use SUPER, but everyone seems to ignore me when I recommend it :(. lol.

Good luck

edit: The TV might also be picky about audio codecs (mp3, aac etc) or container formats (avi, mov etc). What TV is it? Does it say anything in the manual? And yes, if you use mpeg4, you'll get equivalent quality at lower bitrates (i.e. smaller files).
 
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DVD is MPEG 2, not MPEG 4. MPEG 4 is really an umbrella term for a whole load of codecs. Things like XVid, DivX, H263, H264 etc are all various MPEG 4 standards. It's likely you've simply selected the wrong codec. Although I've never seen a TV with this feature, I'd imagine it would play Xvid or DivX files okay. I think there's a setting in WinAVI to set this up. Personally I would use SUPER, but everyone seems to ignore me when I recommend it :(. lol.

Good luck

edit: The TV might also be picky about audio codecs (mp3, aac etc) or container formats (avi, mov etc). What TV is it? Does it say anything in the manual? And yes, if you use mpeg4, you'll get equivalent quality at lower bitrates (i.e. smaller files).

I just think its the name m8 sounds like a SUPER programme though have you got a jennifer for it :banana:
 
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I use nero and save it as a iso file, then burn it to the stick
 
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