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Of course, I think across next week end, I will end to fix all this issues. Quote:
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Take your time :bowdown:
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Noob question about drag&drop (don't work in my case)
Hi,
First of all, I know what is drag&drop, and a windows interface ! :P The problem is that I can't add more than one file to procalc: it always sustitute the only file I have in the list... And one small bug: if you change a path (hc path for example), i don't take effect until you restart procalc. Thanks, Fabrice |
Re: Noob question about drag&drop (don't work in my case
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As there is no "clear the list" button, I think that Luis do not think about adding the files one by one. But I drop the app because of some results I found weird. For instance in full mode I dont understand why a movie that is twice long as the other should have a bitrate doubled ! There is really no reason to do that. I have to verify more closely the "complexity" mode but I will do that with fewer movies. |
Re: Noob question about drag&drop (don't work in my case
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Let's think of 2 movies. Movie A - 120mins. mainly very low action movie with a lot of long dark scenes. Movie B - 90mins. mainly very high action movie with a lot of very bright scenes. It is reasonable to say that movie B will require more space on the DVD to have the same visual quality of movie A. So maybe you could end up with ~2.8Gb (minus audio size) for movie B and ~1.5Gb (minus audio size) for movie A. I have seen this happen with a couple of movies of mine. And visually compared, they seem to have the same visual quality when I watch them on a 16:9 32" TV. |
Re: Noob question about drag&drop (don't work in my case
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I have two movies that have the SAME complexity (pure theory). One is 120 minutes, the other is 60. Let imagine that in pure "time" mode, the avg bitrate should be 3000. With this, movie1 will use 2 GB, movie2 will use 1GB (still pure theory, this numbers are not the real ones). In pure complexity mode, the two movies will receive also 3000 as their complexity is the same. File size is still 2GB and 1GB. In "full" mode, ASPA will allocate a bitrate to movie1 that is the double than the one for movie2 !! (4000 and 2000). With this movie1 will take 2.5GB and movie1 will have only 0.5. But they still have the same complexity. Movie2 has no reason to be handicaped like this. This is what happens to my movies yesterday : 1 episode is 1h23, all 7 others are 42 minutes. Complexity is quite the same (let say that is 1 is the complexity of first episode, complexity for others is in the range 0.8-1.2).
According me, "full mode" is a bad idea, or there is something badly implemented into it. Quote:
Putting in more straight words the question is : why a 2 hours movies should receive a better bitrate than a 1 hour movie ? This can be easily tested : Take a movie, create these scipts : Code:
Mpeg2Source("the movie name.d2v")Code:
a=Mpeg2Source("the movie name.d2v")Now do a calc with three time the first script. The result on the DVD of script1 + script2 or 3x script1 is the same. But ASPA won't give you at all the same quality to your two DVDs. |
Phil,
could you test my spreadsheet with your samples? Encode a 3% sample of each episode with SelectRangeEvery(500,15) and fill in the values. Number of frames means the total number of frames in the clip. You need to fill in that, the avg bitrate of the sample and the audio bitrate. http://www.saunalahti.fi/sainki/kbps_eng_multi.xls (Of course, you can test your theory as well :wink: ) |
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Note: HC reports BIG peaks in its window. Can we trust that ? Currently it shows 18195 as max !!! |
And the result of my suggested test are :
Aspa results with script1 + script 2 (movie - minutes - seconds - avg bitrate) --------------------------------------- Full mode : script1 40 59 2465 (can you imagine the quality ?) script2 81 59 5545 :!: Time mode : script1 40 59 4519 script2 81 59 4519 Complexity mode : script1 40 59 4394 script2 81 59 4581 (quite the same as time mode and both values near the same -> that is normal as both movies have the same complexity but the samples are not exactly the same) Aspa results with 3 times script1 (movie - minutes - seconds - avg bitrate) --------------------------------------- Full mode : script1 40 59 4519 script1 40 59 4519 script1 40 59 4519 Time mode : script1 40 59 4519 script1 40 59 4519 script1 40 59 4519 Complexity mode : script1 40 59 4519 script1 40 59 4519 script1 40 59 4519 (as you can see, the formula used by Luis are correct -> all the figures are the same, this is not an error :-)) |
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Yep, now I see what you mean ;-).
Could you check Boulder's spreadsheet too? That's what I've been using and it hasn't failed me once. Just so that we can compare both methods. That is, if you have time and a bit of patience :). Cheers |
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*cq 1.5Beside this, does "SelectRangeEvery(500,15)" select exactly a 3% sample length for a NTSC 29.97 source ? or is it only for PAL source ? |
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So if you would encode the same movie clip in regular CQ and with CQ_maxbitrate, both should end up with the same avg bitrate. And that doesn't happen because CQ_max does not use the spare bits where there is no need for more bitrate. Hank has that in his to-do list but I guess he is now focused on compliancy and he will implement such features later on. So regular CQ is sharper on the avg bitrate needed but unfortunately it doesn't take care of spikes. That's why we have to use CQ_max. Cheers |
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Sorry Boulder I had a typo.
Please re-read my edited post. Cheers |
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We use Excel and it should do that better than me. Currently I can give you the time, fps and filesize of the sample, that should be enought :). Can you do the calc yourself with these informations ? I don't have time for understanding your formulas now (i'm at the office ;)) Just tell me what data you need. |
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script1 : total length : 40'59" (73704 frames) sample length : 1'14" (2219 frames) fps : 29.97 sample filesize : 54.145 MB script2 : total length : 81'59" (147408 frames) sample length : 2'27" (4424 frames) fps : 29.97 sample filesize : 111.776 MB (with a peak up to 31450 in HC :D) For audio bitrate I used 384 in my test with ASPA. |
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