• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

  • CF has always been a site that welcomes people from different backgrounds and beliefs to participate in discussion and even debate. That is the nature of its ministry. In view of recent events emotions are running very high. We need to remind people of some basic principles in debating on this site. We need to be civil when we express differences in opinion. No personal attacks. Avoid you, your statements. Don't characterize an entire political party with comparisons to Fascism or Communism or other extreme movements that committed atrocities. CF is not the place for broad brush or blanket statements about groups and political parties. Put the broad brushes and blankets away when you come to CF, better yet, put them in the incinerator. Debate had no place for them. We need to remember that people that commit acts of violence represent themselves or a small extreme faction.
  • We hope the site problems here are now solved, however, if you still have any issues, please start a ticket in Contact Us

  • The rule regarding AI content has been updated. The rule now rules as follows:

    Be sure to credit AI when copying and pasting AI sources. Link to the site of the AI search, just like linking to an article.

iPad media file issue

WalksWithChrist

Seeking God's Will
Jan 5, 2005
22,860
1,352
USA
Visit site
✟53,730.00
Faith
Unitarian
Marital Status
Married
I'm looking for a reliable way to transfer media (pictures and video) off an iPad 3. I was using the Windows 7 picture import utility and that mostly works. I originally tried transferring the files manually (copy and paste) but the file transfer would randomly stop. I take large batches of pix and vids...so that's no good.

The only problem with using the import utility with Windows 7 is that the videos will only play normally with Windows Media Player. If I use VLC or anything else, the video stutters very badly.

What I did do was use my Windows 8 laptop (my wife's has Windows 7 and it was the one that I primarily used to store media...yes, there is a backup on my external hard drive) one time to transfer files and I noticed that videos played normally on VLC. So I thought the Windows 8 import app fixed the problem.

Then my wife told me the video I had just transferred to her laptop still stuttered. I checked again and it plays fine using VLC on Windows 8, but not using VLC on Windows 7. Both laptops have been recently updated via Windows Update.

I'm sure all that was pretty hard to follow! Any input?
 

Qyöt27

AMV Editor At Large
Apr 2, 2004
7,879
573
40
St. Petersburg, Florida
✟96,859.00
Faith
Methodist
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Others
Any number of things could cause it:
  • the laptops' respective specs
  • the format, resolution, and framerate of the video files
  • the trustworthiness of the USB (or other) port used to actually transfer the data (in the case of transfers suddenly stopping)
  • if the import utility is actually doing a format conversion during the transfer process (which can end up causing other problems down the line, too)
  • VLC's versioning - if they aren't the same version, then the behavior might be fixed simply by updating to the latest version
  • depending on the format, whether hardware acceleration is fully usable from within libavcodec (particularly, this could be an issue if the import utility converted the videos to VC-1 - a.k.a. WMV9 - during the transfer process; it's expected that WMP would play them without issues, but I have no hard numbers on the level of performance for libavcodec's VC-1 decoder or if it can use hardware accel on them)

Unfortunately, the only thing I can help to diagnose is the format stuff. Grab Mediainfo (here; it's also apparently in the Mac App Store but I don't know if it's available for iOS devices like the iPad) and run it on the files - if necessary, run it on the files before they're transferred, and then again on the target machine where the problems are encountered. Copy/paste the result(s) here.


As a wild guess, I'm going to assume it's actually an issue with different versions of VLC, or that what you're seeing is one laptop using hardware acceleration through the Media Foundation (or maybe DirectShow) decoders in WMP, but *not* getting any hardware accel through libavcodec in VLC (which ties back into the version of VLC being used - newer versions are more likely to have hardware acceleration as an option; I can't say from my own experience whether VLC exposes libavcodec's hardware-accelerated decoders because I use mpv...and my computer is so ancient that not having hardware accel doesn't even rank on a list of things I have to worry about regarding video files).
 
Upvote 0