Can someone explain to me, or point me to an explanation, of what XviD's alternative is to DivX's packed bitstream?
The unoffical XviD FAQ says that if you are always decoding with XviD then you never have to bother with packed bitstream.
But I've noticed that when I do not use packed bitstream there seem to be certain places where two frames share the same position. For instance, using the arrow keys in VDub to advance single frames, if I advance forward to n from some position before n then I will see a frame from scene 1. But if I advance backward to n from some position after n then I will see a frame from scene 2.
So I'd appreciate it if someone would be willing to explain the general idea to me and perhaps an explanation for this odd effect.
The unoffical XviD FAQ says that if you are always decoding with XviD then you never have to bother with packed bitstream.
But I've noticed that when I do not use packed bitstream there seem to be certain places where two frames share the same position. For instance, using the arrow keys in VDub to advance single frames, if I advance forward to n from some position before n then I will see a frame from scene 1. But if I advance backward to n from some position after n then I will see a frame from scene 2.
So I'd appreciate it if someone would be willing to explain the general idea to me and perhaps an explanation for this odd effect.
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