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sunny2095
20th January 2006, 07:29
Hi Friends,

I am a newbie in the field of encoding. In this forum this is my first post & I hope that I will get good support from all of you. I want help related to the following topics :

1) I am using AutoGK for encoding purposes. I Don't know its exact version but I think that it is 1.26. My problem is that I am not able to access its Hidden options. I have also checked its help section. In it, it was written that press ctrl+F9 to access its hidden options. But even after pressing ctrl+F9 the the hidden options are nowhere on the screen. Please help me in this matter.


2) Recently, I encoded 250 MB .VOB File. In terms of size I selected "custom size" & choose 70 MBb but to my surprise sfter 4 hours of encoding the file that I got was of 1.63 GB . Please tell me what went wrong at that time. I selected MP3 in audio encoding, Resolution of around 640*480.

3) I am unable to selcet subtitle options & audio. After selecting input field & chossing the location where the output file is to be stored. I can only see only 2 options in the audio drop down menu "No audio track & Unknown Audio". The same case heppens in Subtitles.

4) As we know that normal 700Mb Cd's can store only 80 minutes of video. But normal movies are of around 2 to 2.5 hours. So please tell me that how can I store such a huge movie into 1 CD while making video CD.

Please help me in solving above writtEn problems I shall be very thankful to you.




(SIMRANJIT SINGH)

CWR03
20th January 2006, 08:21
1) If you're using an older version of AutoGK you'll need to install the files for hidden options. Upgrading to the current version would solve that problem.

2) There's no way to tell what could have happened without your log file.

3) If you're not encoding a DVD rip, your format may not be compatible with AutoGK. Again, we'd need your log file.

4) AutoGK will do all of the work for you in fitting a full-length movie onto a CD in Xvid/DivX format. If you meant an MPEG-1 video CD, it's not possible; as you said a standard CD can hold only 80 minutes of video.