WyldeF1r3
15th May 2003, 01:43
There were some other threads similar to this involving other aspects of data such as start and end times, etc, but I didn't see anything like this. I also had no idea how to search for it, so if this has been answered, please point me in the right direction.
I am encoding several(several hundred) very small clips (about 1:20 to 2:45 in length each) each at unique and, sometimes, quite different settings. Rather than waste time and sit in front of my machine for each of these several hundred tests and record certain information, is there a way I can have vdub catch it, or does it catch it by default when I use job control?
I need to find out the min/max/average fps I'm encoding each of these clips at, total and exact individual encoding time I can find due to another filter I'm using, so I could do alot of math and propbably figure it out be dividing total time into fps but that would also take an undesired amount of extra effort. Is there a simpler way I can find out what fps I was encoding the clips at?
I am encoding several(several hundred) very small clips (about 1:20 to 2:45 in length each) each at unique and, sometimes, quite different settings. Rather than waste time and sit in front of my machine for each of these several hundred tests and record certain information, is there a way I can have vdub catch it, or does it catch it by default when I use job control?
I need to find out the min/max/average fps I'm encoding each of these clips at, total and exact individual encoding time I can find due to another filter I'm using, so I could do alot of math and propbably figure it out be dividing total time into fps but that would also take an undesired amount of extra effort. Is there a simpler way I can find out what fps I was encoding the clips at?