2007-05-23, 01:23 AM
Recording in GBPVR is nothing but a trigger to write a file. GBPVR itself uses directShow to create files (and actually saves a graph to look at), the graph is basically a specification of different 'filters' that create and modify and perhaps play media.
Timeshifting in GBPVR simply plays a file thats currently being written.
But GBPVR creates very specific types of graphs... if you use graphedit what you can create is only depended on the coder, decoders etc. that you have installed.
So if you create a graph of your own that writes video to a file you can record and timeshift and do so in ways that is not natively supported in GBPVR, and software decoding probably never will be officially supported because its performance is variable base on your machine, settings and codecs and Sub doesn't have time to deal will all that. So this plug in allows those who want to dabble a step further to do that. There are network filters as well so you could even create graphs that record network streams if you wanted (might need a bit more coding )
I suggest the ATI site because graph's can get really complex and differ depend upon what is on your system and can really only be shared with pictures (or sometimes XML files) and one may not work on another machine. So I can't really support how to work on graph's but the ATI site is pretty darn good.
Timeshifting in GBPVR simply plays a file thats currently being written.
But GBPVR creates very specific types of graphs... if you use graphedit what you can create is only depended on the coder, decoders etc. that you have installed.
So if you create a graph of your own that writes video to a file you can record and timeshift and do so in ways that is not natively supported in GBPVR, and software decoding probably never will be officially supported because its performance is variable base on your machine, settings and codecs and Sub doesn't have time to deal will all that. So this plug in allows those who want to dabble a step further to do that. There are network filters as well so you could even create graphs that record network streams if you wanted (might need a bit more coding )
I suggest the ATI site because graph's can get really complex and differ depend upon what is on your system and can really only be shared with pictures (or sometimes XML files) and one may not work on another machine. So I can't really support how to work on graph's but the ATI site is pretty darn good.