![Question :?:](./images/smilies/icon_question.gif)
thanks in advance
I've only used it for animated .gifs but in SPIN if you choose:
Yes, Fuse can record emulation at 50 fps into its own format, which you can then convert with fmfconv and an encoder of your choice (I personally use ffmpeg).
A nice trick you can do with fmfconv -> ffmpeg is to use the Zip Motion Blocks codec (zmbv). This gives you a lossless conversion with a very low bitrate (~300 kbps @ 1080p - very handy for reducing file size for upload to YouTube).Ast A. Moore wrote: ↑Mon Apr 02, 2018 10:57 pmYes, Fuse can record emulation at 50 fps into its own format, which you can then convert with fmfconv and an encoder of your choice (I personally use ffmpeg).
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fmfconv speccy.fmf | ffmpeg -i - -vf palettegen palette.png
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fmfconv speccy.fmf | ffmpeg -i - -i palette.png -filter_complex "null [x]; [x][1:v] paletteuse" -c:a flac -c:v zmbv -compression_level:a 12 speccy.mkv
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fmfconv speccy.fmf | ffmpeg -i - -i palette.png -filter_complex "scale=960:720:flags=neighbor [x]; [x][1:v] paletteuse" -c:a flac -c:v zmbv -compression_level:a 12 speccy.mkv
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fmfconv speccy.fmf | ffmpeg -i - -i palette.png -filter_complex "crop=288:216,scale=1440:1080:flags=neighbor [x]; [x][1:v] paletteuse" -c:a flac -c:v zmbv -compression_level:a 12 speccy.mkv
That’s a neat trick. Thanks! (I don’t condone the use of non-standard containers and codecs, though, so I’ll stick to h.264(5) and mp4.)lister_of_smeg wrote: ↑Tue Apr 03, 2018 12:23 am A nice trick you can do with fmfconv -> ffmpeg is to use the Zip Motion Blocks codec (zmbv). This gives you a lossless conversion with a very low bitrate (~300 kbps @ 1080p - very handy for reducing file size for upload to YouTube).
Definitely easier, but I find it hard to believe it's better than that perfectly scaled 1080p 50fps from fuse.PeteProdge wrote: ↑Tue Apr 03, 2018 9:01 am A truly easier and better way to record footage from emulators of any kind (including ZXSpin) is to use OBS
"The nice thing about standards is that you have so many to choose from"Ast A. Moore wrote: ↑Tue Apr 03, 2018 9:17 am (I don’t condone the use of non-standard containers and codecs, though, so I’ll stick to h.264(5) and mp4.)
True dat. ’Sept FLAC and MKV ain’t one of ’em.Guesser wrote: ↑Tue Apr 03, 2018 1:15 pm"The nice thing about standards is that you have so many to choose from"Ast A. Moore wrote: ↑Tue Apr 03, 2018 9:17 am (I don’t condone the use of non-standard containers and codecs, though, so I’ll stick to h.264(5) and mp4.)
Nothing to do with me, though I agree with you
Thank you. I'll add these examples to the fmfconv manual.lister_of_smeg wrote: ↑Tue Apr 03, 2018 12:23 am A nice trick you can do with fmfconv -> ffmpeg is to use the Zip Motion Blocks codec (zmbv). This gives you a lossless conversion with a very low bitrate (~300 kbps @ 1080p - very handy for reducing file size for upload to YouTube).
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I've not tried it with ZX Spin but, if you use Windows 10, I'd imagine that operating system's built-in screen recorder will do the job. Initiate it by pressing Windows key+G and then follow the prompts...
Still works to me and I use W10.
Interesting, what setting do you use?
That's the bug which i thought.Neil Parsons wrote: ↑Sat May 29, 2021 9:59 pm For a while, when I tried to play AVI files created with Spectaculator with any of multimedia players installed in my computer, I could only listen it (no visual) with default Microsoft RLE compressor.