scottdvd
03-16-2006, 04:08 PM
Watched a few the other day, some not currently being shown anywhere else. Not too bad for free. Here is a link if you want to check it out
http://television.aol.com/in2tv
http://television.aol.com/in2tv
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View Full Version : Anyone watch the free TV shows on AOL yet? scottdvd 03-16-2006, 04:08 PM Watched a few the other day, some not currently being shown anywhere else. Not too bad for free. Here is a link if you want to check it out http://television.aol.com/in2tv JMas493 03-16-2006, 08:44 PM I've downloaded a couple. They took about 4 hours each with my DSL connection. It appears they will stay on my computer until June 1, then disappear. There doesn't seem to be a way to burn them to DVD. John BeefyBoyGod 03-16-2006, 09:44 PM I only checked out the Freddy episodes. High Quality they ain't. My original airing tapes look better, as do the PAl tapes. Either they've treated the master tapes poorly, or the codec they're using leaves alot to be desired. Or both. TVFactFan 03-17-2006, 01:46 PM I've downloaded a couple. They took about 4 hours each with my DSL connection. It appears they will stay on my computer until June 1, then disappear. There doesn't seem to be a way to burn them to DVD. John Well that makes the Tvshows on AOL pointless to TV collectors if you can;t burn them to DVD. cooltvshows 03-18-2006, 06:12 PM I haven't downloaded any of these shows yet, but safe to say they've been compressed, probably using divx or some other digital video format. Highly compressed videos can be improved by running digital video filters on them. The shows can be depixelated, smoothed, desaturated, and otherwise improved in video quality. As for the resolution, it's probably 320 x 240, but a lot of sets use mpeg-2 320 x 240 and they look pretty good. 320 x 240 looks fine on a standard TV set if it's encoded correctly. As for burning the shows to DVD, it _can_ be done. All that's necessary is to convert the compressed .avi file to some other video format, like Type 2 DVD or Huffyuv, and then re-encode it to mpeg-2 and author and burn a DVD from it. It can be done. Don't give up hope, folks. BeefyBoyGod 03-19-2006, 04:57 PM Highly compressed videos can be improved by running digital video filters on them. The shows can be depixelated, smoothed, desaturated, and otherwise improved in video quality. I've seen this done, but the results just aren't good enough. barb1686 03-21-2006, 11:52 PM I've downloaded a couple. They took about 4 hours each with my DSL connection. It appears they will stay on my computer until June 1, then disappear. There doesn't seem to be a way to burn them to DVD. John Takes me a few minutes (roughly 3-4MB per second)...I have cable internet. I downloaded an episode of Lois & Clark which is about 45 minutes in about 10 minutes I'd say. And it's still streaming video...with their own player (if you download them), so you aren't suppose to be able to save them. I'm sure in time you'll be able to crack it, but when that starts to happen then it probably won't be available anymore or they'll start charging. I'm fine with watching it on my computer...I just want to be able to see the episodes again. All this for free, so I'm happy. :D Lamont 03-22-2006, 12:00 AM download 1 ep to watch, but it took forever so i just cancelled it :p cooltvshows 03-22-2006, 04:40 AM There are two ways to capture and save streaming video. You can use software at a site like this: http://all-streaming-media.com/record-video-stream/ Or you can set the streaming video to full screen, then set the screen resolution to 640 x 400 and hook up something like the Averkey Gold VGA-to-TV converter and put a DVD recorder on the output of the Averkey. Streaming video is simple and easy to capture and save. |