Charlie wrote:oneillmark2003 wrote:,<nip>
Anyone got any ideas why the laptop is not recognising the card reader as a mass removeable storage devices?
Could be a bad card reader, issue with the laptop, issue with the card? Not sure TBH
A few point s here @oneillmark:
1. If your sd card is sdhc and you have an older PC then you will need a dedicated sdhc card reader.
2.The Scroll will not recognise your sd card if you have formatted in NTFS. It will recognise FAT32 OK though.
3.The size of the finished film depends on the amount of compression applied during the conversion process.
Usually (but not always) larger film files tend to be better quality. AVI is not a film format in itself, it is a film container and the container not only holds the film but the necesaary code to unpack it. Your apparently larger films can be made smaller and still be in AVI format if they are compressed more. However, this will reduce final quality, but on a small screen like the Excel, you may not notice it.
Whatever package you are using to rip your DVD's will almost certainly have a menu in its options somewhere for you to choose the level of compression you want. There is also a reverse side to this, although a more highly compressed file will be smaller, it will take longer to create. So the world is your oyster on this one. If it looks OK to you, then it is OK. Personally I use H264 standard which I find gives very good quality but does result in larger files.
I am confident, that if you overcompress a file, that whilst it may still function on your PC apparently OK, it will give your Excel processor a caning when trying to unpack it for you to watch - which will result in poor performace, or in extreme cases refuse to play at all.