The best Divx Quallity

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  • Enchanter
    Old member
    • Feb 2002
    • 5417

    #16
    'Have you ever seen this rip of Shreck that goes arownd on many pear to pear programs or the Planet of the Apes'68. Its only 1 CD and It looks wonderfull, almost like the DVD. I mean no macroblocks at all.... no litle warm artifacts wiggling arround the shoulders or hair of the people... nothing wrong, SUPERB!!!! And only !CD. '


    Can you post the filesize, resolution and length of the movie? Quite interested to know.

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    • Hoschi
      Junior Member
      Junior Member
      • Mar 2002
      • 16

      #17
      Hi!

      I know why shrek has such a good quality with only 1 CD: It is no real movie! You will see on all movies like shrek, toystory, southpark... that you can put a good quality on low space. such movies don't need such a high datarate. Thats it

      kind regards

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      • Enchanter
        Old member
        • Feb 2002
        • 5417

        #18
        Not necessarily...

        It's more probably because most animation movies have short presentation time and hence encoders are able to assign higher overall bitrate for the movie.

        Comment

        • Erci
          Digital Video Enthusiast
          Digital Video Enthusiast
          • Nov 2001
          • 333

          #19
          As in any other post that have probs with the quality and other probs to I sugest GordianKnot. With this program you can use divx divx 4xx and divx 5. I tried it out with divx and divx5. I havent tried 4 beacuse of it's small calculating probs. I haven't had any probs at all with this program. If you use it with divx then you can use nadubs sbc encoding. This let you get a superb quality. Or if you choose 4 or 5 you can use virtualdub.
          The official guide of GKnot is www.doom9.org/gknot-main.htm
          And if you would like a good divx5 guide (I don't know if you can find any here at digital-digest) you can find that to at doom9.org.

          I love this program=)

          //Erci
          DVD Backup Guide

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          • Erci
            Digital Video Enthusiast
            Digital Video Enthusiast
            • Nov 2001
            • 333

            #20
            forgat the smilies=) it should be divx 3.11.

            //Erci
            DVD Backup Guide

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            • techno
              Digital Video Master
              Digital Video Master
              • Nov 2001
              • 1309

              #21
              That's right, it SHOULD be DIVX 3.11alpha!



              Techno

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              • Hoschi
                Junior Member
                Junior Member
                • Mar 2002
                • 16

                #22
                I don't think that the better quality is a result of shorter playing times... Shrek for example is about 90 minutes long, many 'normal' movies have the same length, but you won't get the same quality on the same size...

                I prefer my opinion: not so much different colors, not so much space... (mmmhhh, I'm not sure if there are less colors, but it has something to do with colors, I think)

                kind regards

                Comment

                • benderman
                  Digital Video Specialist
                  Digital Video Specialist
                  • Nov 2001
                  • 770

                  #23
                  Normaly computergenerated pictures/videos are less compressible than reallife material. That's because computergenerated images have harder edges and sharper backgrounds. The only problem with filmed videos could be the picturenoise that makes it less compressible. The same problem happens with cartoons. There are not many details, but the hard edges (black lines around every object) need a very high bitrate for dvd-quality.
                  don't trust in guides

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                  • TheShadow091
                    Member
                    Member
                    • Jan 2002
                    • 57

                    #24
                    Many of the 'group-ripped' movies that arent cartoon/computer animated films still come out near perfect. All of the DOMiNiON flicks i've download are great and near perfect quality. If only they'd release a guide!

                    -TheShadow

                    "Chance favors the prepared mind"
                    -Houdini

                    Comment

                    • Enchanter
                      Old member
                      • Feb 2002
                      • 5417

                      #25
                      If only they'd release a guide!
                      If they did, they wouldn't be known as the group releasing HQ movie rips anymore, would they?
                      But then again, there is more to it than just a simple guide reading.

                      As for the Shrek rip running at 90 minutes, it's still short enough. I have done one rip running at around this time length and I was able to assign 875-925kbit for the bitrate. That's high enough for a DVD quality. I did Anna & The King once for a 1CD rip. I had to use a resolution of 512x224 and a bitrate of 500 or lower. The end result still looks good with no obvious 'blurredness' and no macroblocks anywhere in sight.

                      As for my question earlier, anyone can post to me the filesize, resolution and length of the movie? I want to see what I can derive from these values.

                      Comment

                      • IztokT
                        Junior Member
                        Junior Member
                        • Nov 2001
                        • 11

                        #26
                        To Enchanter

                        I did Anna & The King once for a 1CD rip. I had to use a resolution of 512x224 and a bitrate of 500 or lower. The end result still looks good with no obvious 'blurredness' and no macroblocks anywhere in sight.

                        --

                        Why don't you share the setting you used to do this.

                        Comment

                        • TheShadow091
                          Member
                          Member
                          • Jan 2002
                          • 57

                          #27
                          Pleeeeeaaaassssee

                          -TheShadow

                          "Chance favors the prepared mind"
                          -Houdini

                          Comment

                          • Enchanter
                            Old member
                            • Feb 2002
                            • 5417

                            #28
                            Here's what I did (And I think it fitting that you should do likewise). I kept changing the settings and reencoding the movie over and over until I have FINALLY got the quality I wanted.

                            A few rule of thumbs: If your movie is mostly slow-action type (Anna & The King is pretty 'slow'), you can comfortably use a high curve compression rate (25%?). If it is high-action type, you should probably use a lower curve compression rate so that your actions look good (while sacrificing the quality of the slow-motion scenes). The asymmetrical curve compression settings will give you a more definite control over this. Increasing the Payback Delay shouldn't hurt too.

                            If you have a two-hour or longer movie, using a smaller resolution is a must. Bilinear resizing will be recommended too as this will make the movie more blurred, but easier to compress with DivX (Courtesy of Benderman for pointing this out to me).

                            The guides also mention that Proportional is the way to go, but my results have always been better with Bias. Also, I use the gauge a lot of time to influence the size of the output. That's probably why I seldom find calculators of much use...

                            I will welcome any comments or correction as I admittedly think that my settings are never optimal (As we greedy humans always do).

                            p.s. Any DivX4/5 enthusiast here who can finally see what I meant by 'Quality Control'?
                            Last edited by Enchanter; 19 Mar 2002, 09:03 PM.

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