Thanks Harry, I received your vdr files.
This is a different problem. Here, the actual timestamps transmitted by the TV station "jump" during the recording. The jump happens when "Hamburg Journal" starts and the music changes. This is also why VDR has split the file into pieces. If you play 002.vdr in mplayer, for example, you'll see that it starts at this point.
I'm guessing that 003.vdr starts when "Hamburg Journal" finishes, and then the timestamps are back in the original sequence. So the total length is correct when you play it, because vomp calculates the length from timestamps in 001.vdr and 003.vdr.
We assumed that timestamps would always be continuous, but it seems that some TV stations don't work this way. Have you seen things like this on recordings from other channels?
Mark
This is a different problem. Here, the actual timestamps transmitted by the TV station "jump" during the recording. The jump happens when "Hamburg Journal" starts and the music changes. This is also why VDR has split the file into pieces. If you play 002.vdr in mplayer, for example, you'll see that it starts at this point.
I'm guessing that 003.vdr starts when "Hamburg Journal" finishes, and then the timestamps are back in the original sequence. So the total length is correct when you play it, because vomp calculates the length from timestamps in 001.vdr and 003.vdr.
We assumed that timestamps would always be continuous, but it seems that some TV stations don't work this way. Have you seen things like this on recordings from other channels?
Mark