On Mon, 01 Feb 2016 17:50:31 -0800, Solly <rlSolly@REMOVEshaw.ca>
wrote:
>Old Geek <eldergeekenator@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>On Sun, 31 Jan 2016 14:44:26 -0800, Solly <rlSolly@REMOVEshaw.ca>
>>wrote:
>>
>>>Old Geek <eldergeekenator@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>>On Tue, 26 Jan 2016 02:11:04 GMT, rlSolly@REMOVEshaw.ca (Solly) wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>Recently requested. Originially posted by SuperTool in Feb 2009.
>>>>>I do not have number two.
>>>>
>>>>M.P. Android posted number 2 on 1/29/09 as Young Womans Fantasies.
>>>>Would you like a repost of that?
>>>>
>>>>EG.
>>>Yes please and thank you.
>>
>>It is worth noting that when I was fast forwarding through this there
>>were several spots where I had to make large jumps to get anywhere. It
>>seemed to want to return to the spot I was fast forwarding from. It
>>does play through thos spots though.
>>If someone can fix that please do. If you can post a how to even
>>better.
>>
>>EG.
>Thanksfor the post. Definitely not the same movie. I see that you mean
>about the navigation. I understand that PGCEDIT can do major repairs but I
>have not learned how to use it. If I really need a the feature, I re-Author
>the DVD.
>
You're very welcome, glad to help out.
Thanks for the info too, I'll give it a try. I haven't learned a new
program in a while, this will give me a good chance.
EG.
>
>
>What is PgcEdit?
>
>PgcEdit was initially written to supplement IfoEdit, an excellent freeware
>program which makes it possible to modify almost all the information
>contained in a DVD’s IFO files. PgcEdit offers a comprehensive and easy to
>understand view of the DVD’s programming. It allows you to edit, via easy
>to use GUIs, all the DVD’s commands with their legal values, without any
>limitations except those imposed by the DVD standard.
>
>PgcEdit also has an extremely powerful but easy to use PGC Editor, where you
>can make changes to stream assignments, subtitle colours, the chapter table,
>cell and PGC still times, the cell flags, VOB/Cell IDs and many others,
>again through an easy and intuitive GUI.
>
>PgcEdit’s powerful, fully-featured Menu Editor allows users to edit menus,
>by creating, deleting, hiding, changing the location, size, commands and
>colours of the buttons.
>
>Furthermore, PgcEdit has an exceptionally useful Trace mode allowing users
>to follow the flow of the commands as they are played by a real player,
>while watching how the GPRMs, SPRMs and PUOs change. With this simulation,
>PgcEdit may be used as a powerful debugging tool.
>
>With PgcEdit, you may blank out whole Titlesets easily, which is a very
>convenient space-saving feature and clean up your DVD structure in one click
>with Remove Useless Stuff and its various parts. You can also burn your
>project from PgcEdit.
>
>PgcEdit is also a basic DVD authoring tool – by using its New DVD command,
>combined with importing menus and titles and its Command Editor, you can
>author your DVD from scratch.
>
>PgcEdit is written in Tcl/Tk, which is an interpreted scripting language.
>Tcl/Tk was chosen for its power in building interactive user interfaces and
>for the fact that a Tcl/Tk application can run on any platform which has a
>Tcl/Tk interpreter, including Linux, Windows and MacOSX.
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