Best tool to read TS file, learn type of transport stream?
continued from email...
For quick responses, ask in the forum, otherwise I may not answer for weeks. Quote:
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Gspot is a favorite codec analysis tool, but it's gotten to be much too dated for analysing files like MKV, H.264 or TS. Or at least with any degree of speed or accuracy. I just finished analysing MXF files with Mediainfo on a Mac, and it was accurate -- unlike Gspot. Quote:
Interlace was an invention of television engineers at least 75 years ago. It was a trick to show more frames of video, but without consuming more bandwidth. Instead of somewhat jerky 15 fps, interlacing put it at 30fps. Color put it at 29.97, due to yet another cheat/heck to make it work. In Europe, power was based off 50hz instead of 60hz, so it was 25fps. No cheat needed, because PAL color is/was different from NTSC color. (These days, it's all YUV data, no difference between PAL and NTSC in the digital era.) Anyway, that's why you see it. The best solution to "remove" it is to simply use a player that deinterlaces. Watched on an older tube TV, you'll see nothing unusual. HDTVs have hardware deinterlacers, so again, nothing looks odd. The only reason you'd want to ever deinterlace is if you're converting for streaming, such as Youtube. But for simple watching, use a player like VLC or GOM, and then simply enable one of the de-interlace filters. Quote:
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as you suggested, a better media player is probably the first thing to try.
cheers. |
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