The OSD has been discontinued for several months.
This is not a surprise, for SD video is getting a bit old hat. Not that it is going to go away any time soon, though I suspect a good number of the sorts of people that would buy something like the OSD have a lot of HD kit.
All of the source is still available if you wish to make alterations yourself.
"
All" being the kernel, Qt4, the base Linux system, and the Neuros API/apps. However note that all of the interesting stuff is closed source. So if you think "
wouldn't it be cool to tweak the video recorder to output XviD *, you're plain outta luck".
* - as it is H.263, basically stuffing it into an AVI wrapper and mangling the FourCC ought to be enough to get most "DivX" compatible devices to play the content. I say XviD, however, as I've not yet found a DivX player that failed on a comparable XviD, and I find the resultant quality of image to be better with XviD at the same bitrate. Heck, I'v even had DivX players (mostly) cope with 3ivx format - so I don't see why the OSD's output would be any different... except it is in "industry standard"
- MPEG4 files, which most stand-alone players plain don't understand.
# - this waffle about industry standard is a total red herring. MPEG4 is an unholy mess of rubbish; both H.263 (OSD and the DivX era) can be a valid MPEG4 file, as can the later H.264 as used by the likes of Youtube. They are totally incompatible, yet both "MPEG4". As for the file format,
nothing states that what the OSD generates is a valid MP4 file. As it happens, it is. But then, so would a file containing four audio tracks and corresponding captioning data. The captioning data, incidentally, aimed at high-end equipment, which is why most of the animé fansubs are MKV files instead.
Speaking of which, wouldn't it be nice if the OSD could handle MKVs? I suspect it can if somebody wrote a filter to extract the subtitling and rip apart the video/audio stream (akin to the Flash stripper), but it'd be a rather inelegant solution.
For us Brits, wouldn't it be nice to jack into teletext, lock into p888, and build a subtitle file on the fly during recording. The tvp5150 can do this sort of thing. Likewise it can offer you fine control over contrast, brightness, sharpness... think your recordings are a little too dark? A little fuzzy? No problems, just... oh wait, the
closed source driver doesn't permit this sort of stuff to be done. Meh.
Best wishes,
Rick.