Anyone know the technical reason that DivX doesn't compress B&W videos as much as it does color videos?
DivX B&W vs. Color
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What kind of source material are u talking about here ?.
To make a fair comparison between color and b&w encoding, you would have to make a lossless conversion of a color clip to b&w and try to convert them to divx useing qualitybased encoding, is this what u have done ?Donate your idle CPU time for something usefull.
http://folding.stanford.edu/ -
DVD's aren't allways the same quality. Some of them are single layered and have some noise in the image (which is really a pain in the ass for divs ) some are interlaced that also uses a lot of bitrate.
Also, the B&W movie may even be old and dirty and those black sparks also makes compression difficult...Comment
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To GF Godoy
Although I appreciate your speculation, I'm fairly certain it's not applicable.
I have created .AVIs from MANY commercial color DVDs and MANY commercial B&W DVDs - and have determined that, WITH ALL OTHER THINGS BEING EQUAL, the color DVDs compress approximately 20% smaller than do the B&W DVDs.
Hopefully, someone can provide the technical explanation for this consistent disparity ;>}Comment
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Could you tell us what method you are using for conversion??
And second: if you have already converted allot: have you compressed the Woody Allen's "Famous" I think (the one with Leonardo DiCapri Urgh!!!). This is a new movie, which has no noise at all, and doesn't have those "old" thing effect on the Film itself.
I have compressed Lolita, Dr. Strangelove and Sahara, all of them in 2 pass mode. Havent noticed anything like poor pixelation or something.
What are your doing? (method)Comment
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"I have compressed Lolita, Dr. Strangelove and Sahara, all of them in 2 pass mode. Havent noticed anything like poor pixelation or something."
I know you mean well, and I thank you for trying, but it's apparent you're not comprehending my question...Comment
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I know you mean well, and I thank you for trying, but it's apparent you're not comprehending my question...
Anyway I have completed trials of Color vs B&W encoding.
And as expected DivX does slightly better on the B&W (6,3 % to be exact)
My test was done as follows.
movie: WildWildWest pal version
(only used 1 vob which contained 25 minutes of video)
Encoding method: followed this guide
no resizeing, no chopping, no audio.
DivX codec: 4.12 using Quality based encoding at 95%.
I'am useing qulitybased encoding because it's the only way that filesize can be used as a meaningful measure of compressability.
Only difference between the color and b&w run was the addition of the greyscale filter in vdub.
Results:
color encoding: 330 MB avi file
b&w encoding: 309 MB avi fileDonate your idle CPU time for something usefull.
http://folding.stanford.edu/Comment
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To KHP
"Only difference between the color and b&w run was the addition of the greyscale filter in vdub"
I'm afraid that converting to grayscale (256 colors) is not actually the same as dealing with true B&W (2 colors) - but I appreciate your thought and effort.
By the way, my previous response was directed to GF Godoy, who was referring to, "Havent noticed anything like poor pixelation or something." - which has nothing to do with my question/quandary. Perhaps it would have been clearer if I had captioned my response "To GF Godoy"...Comment
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Perhaps it would have been clearer if I had captioned my response "To GF Godoy"...
It does however explain alot, compressing a 2-color image is inherently much harder than compressing greyscale or color images.
For a detailed explanation why, do some reading on how jpg image compression works.
BTW what commercial DVD's are 2-color ?
And why have you posted this in the general forum when there is a perfectly ontopic group for this ?Donate your idle CPU time for something usefull.
http://folding.stanford.edu/Comment
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Ok, so, let me see if I understand your question:
You are compressing a 2 color movie which is BLACK/WHITE only movie.
I don't know of any source of video that has some little amount of colors.
So, a 2 color movie does not have any grey/lightblack/darkwhite. (????) Sure about this??
I don't mean to be sneaky, but what movie are you compressing???
(Now I am as curious as you LOL )
And 2nd: did you make a qualiy based compression as suggested before? Show us you're results in a 10 minutes clip or something like it.Comment
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did you make a qualiy based compression as suggested before?Donate your idle CPU time for something usefull.
http://folding.stanford.edu/Comment
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yes, I understand.... But how does a 2 colour movie works???
Not even "Trip to the moon" (190X) is doubled colored, you can see shades of grey in it right?
Define the difference of greyscale and 2-colour movie to me.
I don't understand. (perhaps I'm missunderstanding something)Comment
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