No, I can see a need to do a couple of operations:
Rotate the video pi/2 radians.
Reduce the resolution to match that of the screen, and the frame rate to match the abilities of the device.
Tag with time marks, so that the audio and video don’t get out of sync (hint!)
It would be a nice idea, too, if the device itself was able to remember where you were in the video when you turn it off, so it comes back to the same spot later.
Just got a Sansa Fuze and am very frustrated after trying for 1.5 days to convert and upload a video. Have tried many different avenues, including the Sansa Media Converter, but that program keeps flaking out and refusing to work with any of the formats I’ve tried. It just keeps the CONVERT button GREYED OUT, and keeps saying something about format not accepted and other codecs are needed… This is very irksome.
What has worked, using VISTA and the Sansa Fuze, to get a video that is presently in .VOB format into an MP4 format so that Fuze will accept and play it? The .VOB video is rather long (about 1.3 G), considering the storage limit is 4G on this Fuze. It is basically just a slide show with some music on it. Why is this so hard for Fuze to recognize and deal with? Can someone please advise? Thanks.
Cannot find what MODEL NUMBER this Fuze is. Can’t seem to find any reference to a model on any of the printed materials, the box, nor the Red Sansa Fuze itself. Where is the model number?
After a lot of “futzing around” and a call to Sansa “Help” (in India) (who wasted more time & energy and provided no help at all), I was able to solve the dilemma about GREYED OUT CONVERT BUTTON on Sansa Media Converter *simply* by plugging in the Fuze (via USB cable) to my computer. As soon as I plugged in the Fuze, the Convert button “lit up,” enabling the conversion of files to Sansa-readable format. This was on a VISTA machine.
Good luck to those of you struggling to make sense of Sansa’s software. Sansa *really* needs to UPDATE and CORRECT its software, because end-users should not have to struggle for days on end, just to get a program function like the Convert button to work!
Further, it seems risky and sloppy for Sansa software and the Fuze to require you to plug the Fuze into your computer before it will convert a file, because AS SOON AS it converted, it also WROTE the file to my Fuze! That seems rather presumptuous and risky. I was expecting the program to convert the file and allow me to save to my hard drive first, so I could verify that it was what I wanted, before it went ahead and wrote the file to my Fuze, without asking me first.
Oh well, at least the software now works (sort of).
BTW, after all that hassle, the video that got converted and written to my Fuze is so TINY that I probably won’t bother to put additional videos on the Fuze. Not worth the bother, since it is hardly legible…
Good luck, folks. Enjoy Sanza’s music capabilities–which is where it really “shines”!
My favorite thing about the Sansa Media Converter is the way it literally quadrupals the size of all the media files it converts. It just makes you wonder - how DO they do it? I guess the same way the program itself is over 100mb!!!
For a Driector of a compny which I have used in the past and is very good ( I had a great experiance), I expect more from you… Do you have a pop-up blocker? I bet you do and if you turn it off that link will work. There is no text on the page it is a about:blank page that opens and a download window pops up. This is how most professional companies do it.
Takes me to a blank page with a yellow shield down in the bottom left hand corner and the word DONE written beside it
Most likely your firewall or anti-virus software is blocking it from downloading. I get a yellow bar across the top of IE and a warning sound. I just have to click on the bar and tell it to download. Then it does fine.
I have not been able to install the program itself on my Vista 64-bit PC. I get the message, “Internal Failure, Error Number 0x80040707, Description: (none provided)” followed by another dialogue box that says, “Severe, Error loading DirectX DLL (0x100)”
I have had no problem installing the program or using it on my XP computer.
I’m suspecting that this may be yet another program that doesn’t work on 64 bit Vista… :s
It works with 32 bit Vista Ultimate. I am thinking that you are right this is another program that wont work with 64 bit. Try some of the work arounds on this board. Try any video converter (That is the name), to make a file that is compatable with your fuze.
PLEASE allow SMC to function (_as the help file specifie_s) when the player is NOT attached to the PC.
I had no problem converting videos to my FUZE until I used up my space on my internal memory.
When connecting my FUZE and running SMC, the external memory is not recognized.
The help section said that if the player was NOT connected that SMC would save the output file to the temporary directory.
I was going to try this and then transfer the output video manually to the external card (copy&paste thru Win-Explorer)
This doesn’t work either as the CONVERT button is grayed out if the player is not plugged in.
I guess I can find another conversion program to do what this is supposed to do since according to the previous posts; SANSA is not responding to the SMC program complaints. This is an easy fix – Just allow the program to save the output file to the local drive.
FYI (to other users reading this and want to try another convertor):
Output: Video DivX, 224 X 176, 20 fps; Audio MP3 128k
After scouring the net I found: Rhapsody is compatible with FUZE and can be used as an alternative transport/conversion program for the SMC.
Message Edited by daryl_daniels on 03-01-2009 01:04 AM
Good luck to those of you struggling to make sense of Sansa’s software. Sansa *really* needs to UPDATE and CORRECT its software, because end-users should not have to struggle for days on end, just to get a program function like the Convert button to work!
I totally agree to that - I have tried several alternative video converters with many different settings now, without any success.
The original SMC software is total ■■■■. The support hotline suggested to use “Any Video Converter Free” as an alternative, but this does not work either. The e200 V2 is definitely the last MP3 player from SanDisk I bought.
I totally agree to that - I have tried several alternative video converters with many different settings now, without any success.
The original SMC software is total ■■■■. The support hotline suggested to use “Any Video Converter Free” as an alternative, but this does not work either. The e200 V2 is definitely the last MP3 player from SanDisk I bought.
For the record, I have been using WinFF and the settings in the post Arseno linked too and also Avidemux he was kind enough to share knowledge of. I haven’t done any 2 hour movies, but I have successfully converted approx. 100 half-hour TV shows and various downloaded .flv videos using these tools and then finalizing the conversion and transfer with SMC to external memory cards. They play perfectly fine on both my e280v2 and Fuze players.
I have linked to this thread myself many times in helping others having video difficulties. It may not be the only solution, but it is one that works. And both the suggested programs are free to download.
A big round of applause and heart-felt thanks should go out to both ArsenoLupino and themichael for sharing their knowledge, expertise and experience in these matters.