In the VF group, I had a bunch of questions regarding NTFS and defragmentation, etc. One of the recent features is Video Capture's ability to do file spanning. This was presumably added as a workaround to FAT32's 4GB limit for one file. No such limit exists on NTFS. But the option to do so is still there in Video Capture.
Assuming that this feature works flawlessly and as advertised, I'm thinking it is good practice to keep smaller source files down to a smaller size because:
1) If you have HUGE files in NTFS, you need a lot of empty space to do defragmentation (either that, Windows 2000/XP degragmenter is overreacting to the fragmentation of the drive.
2) If you need to do destructive edits to the audio in Sound Forge, it will take a *lot* less time to open up the files, build the peaks, do the edits and reesave the files than if you are dealing with one huge file.
So, anyone have any reactions? Any further advantages to having Video Capture chop up the source files? Disadvantages?
-Jeremy
Assuming that this feature works flawlessly and as advertised, I'm thinking it is good practice to keep smaller source files down to a smaller size because:
1) If you have HUGE files in NTFS, you need a lot of empty space to do defragmentation (either that, Windows 2000/XP degragmenter is overreacting to the fragmentation of the drive.
2) If you need to do destructive edits to the audio in Sound Forge, it will take a *lot* less time to open up the files, build the peaks, do the edits and reesave the files than if you are dealing with one huge file.
So, anyone have any reactions? Any further advantages to having Video Capture chop up the source files? Disadvantages?
-Jeremy