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Re: Video format conversion

Posted by Citizen Bob on 12/09/06 16:41

On Fri, 08 Dec 2006 19:05:30 GMT, "T Shadow"
<NoOne@nonono.com.invalid> wrote:

>if you take the MPG2 and convert it to MPG4 you'll get the loss of 2
>compressions but not a significantly smaller file size than the MPG2.

I do not know what you mean by "significantly smaller".

I have an MPEG-2 clip from a VOB that is 11 minutes in duration. It is
765 MB in size. The frame size is 720x480 and the bit rate is 10
Mbits/sec (10000 Kb/s). I converted it into an AVI/XviD with Auto
Gordian Knot using two-pass conversion at a resolution setting called
1/2 CD, which yields a 350 MB file size.

If I choose the one-pass resolution and set it at 10%, the file size
drops to 358 MB and the resolution is 720x400, 4335 Kb/s. It took 39
minutes on my 2.4 GHz machine. It looks just as good in VLC on a 20"
CRT monitor as the original. The Qf is 0.4 compared to 0.9 for the
original. The file size is about 1/2 the original, which means I can
get the same content on half the number of DVDs, which is a
significant savings in DVD disc cost.

Next I rendered it in AGK using one-pass with a setting of 30%. MPEG-4
uses a variable bit rate to deal with fast motion, so if there is no
fast motion, two-pass rendering is not really needed - which is most
of the time for ordinary content. I have used one-pass many times ans
have never run into a problem with dropped frames. The file size is 92
MB, the frame size is 720x400 and the bit rate is 884 Kb/s. It took 20
minutes to render and has Qf = 0.1. For a 19" viewscreen 1,000 Kb/s is
considered the minimum. Amazingly it looks just as good as the
original and the 2-pass rendering in VLC on my 20" CRT monitor.

So there you have it - a significant file size reduction from 765 MB
down to 92 MB, almost a factor of 10. And yet the video looks every
bit as good in the highly compressed version as the original.


--

"Yet the legislative being only a fiduciary power to act for certain
ends, there remains still in the people a supreme power to remove or
alter the legislative, when they find the legislative act contrary to
the trust reposed in them....And thus the community perpetually retains
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or so wicked as to lay and carry on designs against the liberties and
properties of the subject."
--John Locke

 

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