| 18 Jan 2006 01:43 am |
Baelzebub Guest | Really nice Sakuya 
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| 18 Jan 2006 01:45 am |
Baelzebub Guest | Meant to add. If you can have it so you can select which screen size you want (Drop down menu maybe?) or to use the original it might be handy.
Again though, very handydandy tool indeed 
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| 18 Jan 2006 02:00 am |
Baelzebub Guest | Need an edit button here
And also how about being able to select where to save the converted files too?
I know....i know, demanding m0f0 eh?
Just giving ideas man, works great as it is 
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| 18 Jan 2006 05:10 am |
sakuya Guest | all you have mentioned is going to be in the next release(save to another dir etc).. in maybe a week, i’ll remember to make screen size seleectable in the GUI.
you will alsoe able to have job lists.
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| 18 Jan 2006 05:40 pm |
Baelzebub Guest | Twice as nice man 
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| 21 Jan 2006 07:50 am |
Morpheus77 Guest | you cannot store both audiotracks ands subtitles inside the AVI file, thats probably why they used OGM in the first place.
This is how I do it:
Use Virtualdubmod or that OGMdemuxer to split the streams.
This gives you a AVI file (Divx probably), two audiotracks in OGM format (or just one) and a Subtitle file in SRT format.
You have to pick which audiotrack to combine with the avi file, it cannot contain both.
Now you have to convert the audio from OGM to MP3.
Use a program like oggdec to decode the OGM file to WAV
then compress the wav to mp3 with LAME MP3 Encoder, or dbPoweramp.
Use a program like avimux (included with Ogm2avi) to mux the video and audio together.
(the revered OGM2AVI package contains all the programs I mentioned, and uses a batch file to execute the commands, quite nice)
now the real problem is the subtitles.
if you have the SRT file, mediaplayers can subtitle your video, as long as the names are similar.
If you want to put the subtitle IN the avifile, you have to reencode the file. Which takes a while.
First, you need a subtitle converter, SRTtoSSA its freeware.
then, you need Virtualdub (mod) and the subtitler filter (from the Virtualdub site).
Convert the SRT file to SSA. Default settings are ok. (yellow subs)
Open your video in Virtualdub, and add the Filter for the subtitler, and pick your Subtitles.SSA
make SURE you pick a videocompression (or end up with a 24 Gb file like above).
Videocompression like DIVX5/6 or 4 fast motion is fine. Or pick the one it used to be.
Save the file under a new name.
Now it will project the subtitles over the movie/clip and reencode it.
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| 21 Jan 2006 06:31 pm |
sakuya Guest | why would you want to use that method when my alltoavi does all it in batch mode?
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| 23 Jan 2006 01:56 pm |
xpond Guest | Hi all,
I have just found it how to. It is so simply.
1. Open file *.ogm
2. Go to Streams > Stream list then disable the stream which u do not want
3. Go to File menu > Save as > Save as type = .ogm
4. In video section > Video mode = Direct Stream copy
5. Create your file name then press “Save”
6. When it finish you will get a file ****.ogm
7. Simply just change .ogm to .avi or .mpg
8. Then play it. You will see the movie you love with Subtitle
Wish this could help everyone.
Enjoy,
* So sorry about my poor English. If someone need more explain. Just email me I will try to explain more 
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| 23 Jan 2006 01:59 pm |
xpond Guest | This is my email xpond@exemail.com.au
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| 24 Jan 2006 09:38 pm |
Donho Guest | Which on do I need to ddwonload to convert ogm to AVI? the Linx or the Win32 versions?
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| 25 Jan 2006 02:00 am |
sakuya Guest | if you have Windows then the Win32
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| 26 Jan 2006 03:18 am |
kaleb Guest | People, I’ve been doing everything in here as best as I can. I have one HUGE problem though:
I took a 200 mb ogm file and converted to avi using virtual dub mod and got a THREE GIGABYTE RESULTANT AVI.
What the hell do I do to make the file size reasonable? I only have 5 gigs left on my harddrive to begin with.
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| 26 Jan 2006 03:22 am |
sakuya Guest | try using alltoavi?
alltoavi.sourceforge.net
anyway, maybe because you didnt choose a codec for your output video, just use alltoavi, so much easier
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| 09 Feb 2006 12:34 am |
Baelzebub Guest | Any updates on Alltoavi ?
Dun mean to push but this proggy has great potential 
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| 09 Feb 2006 12:41 am |
sakuya Guest | Yeah, the new 2.1.18 has been released, please try it. I thnk you will really like the new GUI and the many more features added
here is a quick list:
- Job list, you now can have a list of Folders and individual files for the converter to batch at once.
- You can save, load jobs
- There are now presets which you can add yourself, once a preset is choosen as the default you no longer have to chose settings everytime.
- stream information, instead of asking which subtitle/audio stream you want, the GUI now presents you with a list of subtitle/audio streams with their name in plain english(no more Subtitle #1 non sense, it’s now Sub 1 - English)
- You can now specify where to save the converted files
- External audio, sub files with extensions of user' choice
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| 11 Feb 2006 12:05 pm |
Baelzebub Guest |
Very nice mate
All round winner 
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| 11 Feb 2006 12:08 pm |
Baelzebub Guest | Small thing, in the Chose Bitrate tab you have “Special” spelt as “Speical”
Nothing wrong with the program of course
Just figured you would like to know in case it skipped ya.
Excellent work once again 
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| 11 Feb 2006 08:03 pm |
Baelzebub Guest | Used it a bit more...love the job list addition
Is there anyway to make it so that when you run a job list if it finds the save file already exists it asks you if you want to overwrite or not?
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| 22 Feb 2006 06:31 am |
Tinkerbell Guest | Guest5671234 wrote:
I know a much simpler way to do this so-called difficult procedure.
“Instructions To Successfully Change A File From .ogm to .avi”
Programs Needed For This:
VirtualDub Mod
GoldWave
Windows Movie Maker
1. Import the .ogm video file into the VirtualDub Mod program.
2. Go to the “Video” option at the top of the screen, and then click on “Direct stream copy”.
3. Go to file, save as, and save the file to its original name, but add .avi at the end of it.
4. The file should’ve already saved in the location of it’s original .ogm file, but just in case click on the play button on the left bottom of the screen with the “I” symbol.
5. After this is done you’ll probably get an error message, just close it and your file should be there WITHOUT sound though.
6. Now open up the GoldWave program in order to get the sound.
7. Go to file and import the original .ogm file NOT the new .avi file.
8. When the program is done importing the file, AND you see horizontal red and green wave lines, go to file, save as, and save the file.
9. After the previous step the sound file should now be in the place where the .avi file and the original .ogm file is.
10. Now open your Windows Movie Maker program, and import both the .avi file and then the sound file.
11. Place the sound file at the bottom of the timeline first!
12. Click on the + sign magnifier and magnify the timeline to its highest level (or the level you want) this makes it easier to view the clips when you place them on the timeline.
13. Click on the icon on the far left that looks like a light switch to adjust the audio levels, and adjust the audio to the far right so the audio will play clearly.
14. Place the clips on the timeline in their correct order and save the project.
15. Finally simply go to file and then “Save Movie File...” and save it to whatever size you want and voila you have your .avi file with sound.
i performed all the steps before 10 but when i try to import the sound file and the ogm file into movie maker an error occurs stating that they are not windows movie maker files or are corrupted..what should i do?
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| 22 Feb 2006 02:02 pm |
sakuya Guest | i dont see why u want to do the long steps when alltoavi does all that automatically.
you can choose codec, audio, sub streams and all that
look above for links
To Bael:
I’ll remember to include that save confirm in update 
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