Stephen, Can you elaborate? An updated version of FFMpeg? Eric
On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 10:42 AM, Stephen van Vuuren <stephen@sv2studios.com> wrote:
Cinec has an updated version and works great on my machine – I’ve found it stable.
stephen van vuuren
336.202.4777
http://www.insaturnsrings.com/
http://www.sv2dcp.com/
http://www.sv2studios.com/
A film is – or should be – more like music than like fiction. It should be a progression of moods and feelings. The theme, what’s behind the emotion, the meaning, all that comes later.
–Stanley Kubrick
From: After Effects Mail List [mailto:AE-List@media-motion.tv] On Behalf Of Mr. Eric D. Kirk
Sent: Friday, February 15, 2013 10:10 AM To: After Effects Mail List Subject: Re: [AE] ProRes file authoring in Windows (SOLUTION)
I will check this out and see if it works. On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 8:47 AM, Robert Kjettrup <robert@stvmayday.dk> wrote:
Hi Eric No, just place the AnotherGUI folder in a location that it can write to, i think it does some writing to some preference or preset files and it might fail because it is located in a folder windows wants to protect, eg. "Program Files".
I don't know if it was this that fixed it for me when i had the same error. But placing the AnotherGUI folder on the desktop and FFmpeg folder inside the AnotherGUI folder, and i have no more of these errors. Try that, and see if that fixes it.
You can ofcouse encode files to any folder you set inside AnotherGUI. 2013/2/15 Mr. Eric D. Kirk <kirkproductions@gmail.com>
I'm pretty sure I am doing everything you mentioned. My only thought is maybe the files unzipped to the FFMpeg folder need to be removed from the folder that the unzipping created. So, right now, the FFMpeg is in a folder, within the FFMpeg folder. Not sure if that matters.
Now that I re-read your note - "make sure that your windows user account was writing access to the folder where AnotherGUI is located" - are you saying the render location should be in a folder in same location as the AnotherGUI? Or are you saying, just be sure you have write access to wherever you are rendering it to?
On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 4:27 PM, Robert Kjettrup <robert@stvmayday.dk> wrote: i have seen this also when installing it the first time a long time ago, but i can't remember what the solution was.
Make sure you point the path to the correct .exe file Make sure that your windows user account was writing access to the folder where AnotherGUI is located. Normally "Program Files" folder needs administrator access to be able to write files without the poup dialogbox. I have my AnotherGUI installation just in a folder on my desktop, not the most elegant solution, but it works for me. :-)
Now i only get that error when i by accident try to overwrite the same file as i am converting, remember to rename the output file, or set another folder as destination.
Hope any of this can help. 2013/2/14 Mr. Eric D. Kirk <kirkproductions@gmail.com>
Just wondering if anyone saw this post or had anything that might assist me.
On Tue, Feb 12, 2013 at 7:04 PM, Mr. Eric D. Kirk <kirkproductions@gmail.com> wrote:
Hello, I went through this process, the install went fine but when I select my file and hit GO, it asks me if I want to reload my file with errors. I can't figure out what the error is. I've tried an DNxHD file and an AVI file and I have an error that I am unsure how to fix.
Could someone fill in the blanks just a bit between the GO command and ensuring the process actually starts? Also, when I select the Pro Res and hit edit, that top line has the exe file location, while the second line says FCP. Not sure if any of those settings need anything.
I do not use Final Cut Pro so hope that's not an issue here.
Eric On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 11:22 AM, Teddy Gage <teddygage@gmail.com> wrote:
Yikes. Good to know in a pinch but I typically just use Avid DNxHD. while the file sizes may be 10% larger than pro-res the quality is the same. and it's 100% compatible with mac and windows, you just need to download the free codec package from avid. It's easy to convert back into prores on a mac as well.
On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 10:59 AM, Greg Balint <delrazoraelist@gmail.com> wrote: OK, this is probably very big for a lot of you. It was for me at least.
I've found a solution for encoding ProRes on Windows.. it's not the MOST elegant, but it's strides above other solutions with command line prompts. You'll need to render out a "master" render from AE before you transcode it to ProRes. For what it's worth, I render my masters at QuickTime - PhotoJpeg - 98% quality. This codec seems to keep the image pristine while also keeping file-size SUPER SMALL.
Here's a quick tutorial on converting your master render to ProRes.
To localize this "program" make a new folder somewhere on your PC, Inside that folder, make a folder called FFMpeg.
Go to this page http://ffmpeg.zeranoe.com/builds/ and download the latest 64-bit or 32-bit version (I'm using 64-bit - http://ffmpeg.zeranoe.com/builds/win64/static/ )
It'll download a .7z file. it's basically like a zip file. (I use WinRAR) and un-zip it into that folder called FFMpeg we made.
Then, go download this program called "AnotherGUI" under step 2 of this page:
http://www.stuudio.ee/anothergui/
Unzip that file into the first main folder you made (not the FFMpeg one, but the parent directory of it)
Then run AnotherGUI.exe
It'll ask you if you want to load sample presets.. click yes, then OK.
Now click Add Source at the top, and go add your source video.
then where it says Preset in the main program window, click that and go find FCP and choose the ProRes version you want (Double click it)
Once you're at this stage, just make sure your output path is where you want it with the top right button.
And check the output file-name in the right column on the main screen. make sure it's not going to try to overwrite the original. Don't include a file extension on this column.
What's nice is you can import image sequences or batch multiple video files all at once.
Works with everything I've thrown at it.
When you click the "Go button", the first time it'll bring up a dialog box asking you where ffmpeg.exe is.. go into that FFMpeg folder we created earlier, then go into the "bin" folder and select the "ffmpeg.exe" file. You should only have to do this once.
If you want to get advanced, you can click the "edit" button under the Preset and mess around with settings in there..
on the second line of the edit screen's area, with all of the variables shown, there's one that says -vcodec prores -provile:v 0
If you change the profile number you can have all versions of ProRes.
For different flavors of ProRes replace NUMBER with a number from zero to 3 where:
0 : ProRes422 (Proxy) 1 : ProRes422 (LT)
2 : ProRes422 (Normal) 3 : ProRes422 (HQ)
Here's a page with more info if you want to dive into the advanced stuff with the edit window.
http://transcoding.wordpress.com/2012/01/29/prores-ffmpeg/
Anyway, That's it! I just found this last week, after a client of mine needed ProRes files for final delivery, and I offered to send master files for them to convert at their studio. It wasn't a big issue for them, but in the end, it'd be much more professional and nicer to just be able to provide them straight from my end.
Monday, February 11, 2013 9:20 AM
The decoder may be free, but the OP is talking about encoding, which, as far as I know is not free on pc. Personally I am getting tired of everybody I deal with assuming that pro rez is no problemo for me. I recently needed to upload a commercial spot for a station and the specs said they wanted prorez, and the instructions sent from the station talked about how to do this from your final cut project which would all be well and good if I wasn't editing on Avid! sorry to rant but it is Monday morning.
Mike Cardeiro Editor/Animator/Compositor D4 Creative Group - Philadelphia, PA http://www.michaelcardeiro.com/resume/
http://www.youtube.com/user/mcardeiro
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