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Posted by Lon Obers on 07/03/07 12:11
Ken Maltby wrote:
> "Léon Obers" <mail.to.me@invalid.invalid> wrote in message
>>Richard Crowley wrote:
>>>"Léon Obers" wrote ...
[...]
>>>If you actually think the artifacts can be "deblocked" then
>>>you don't understand how very lossy compression such as
>>>is used on DVDs actually works.
[...]
> It would be unrealistic to expect Richard Crowley to
> understand Motion Estimation and Deblocking. He gets
> hung-up on his phobia of the lossyness of temporal
> compression, and can never realize that it can be done
> well, without the disaster he fears so much.
It seems you no him better than me ;-)
> But he is right, that you can't expect to effectively address
> complex technical issues with a simplified interface. You
> don't have to be a pro, but you do need to understand the
> effect of the "tweaks"/settings.
OK, but by lack of a simple glossery within a helpfile
(not ONE singel word about the next settings within the helpfile),
nor to find at their converting tutorials on their website......
http://www.yasasoft.com/tutorials/tutorials.htm
.......the next is hardly to understand:
http://www.fotograaf.cc/ftp/YASA.jpg
in opposite to this:
http://www.fotograaf.cc/ftp/AoA.jpg
If you can only give a little hint which one of the most above
screenshot from YASA is for "deblocking", I should be satisfied.
(The above application has an overall more sharp conversion than AoA)
> One way to get better
> performance from the default settings, is to pay more for
> the program.
Both applications I mentioned are full working applications.
> You also might consider that there is not a lot of
> commercial incentive to develop such a program, at least
> not for any major player. Not with the law suites from
> the movie industry.
Strange, with the every year growing bandwidth of internet, the
distribution of film over the internet shall be as normal as "still"
images (pictures) already has conquer the world already now.
Less to do with law suites from movie industry, evrything with simple
home movie, business movies, tutorial movies, web advertising movies.
> You could break up what you want into separate
> processes and acquire a better encoding program like
> TMPGEnc 4.0 XPress, which goes to some lengths to
> make the process a little easier.
Thanks for the option to look for.
I am trying the demo now. Bulky software. Although a good helpfile.
(Learned what I maybe can use within the other software what I have
already). Have to see further for extra options.
> But that wouldn't be the
> integrated software you seem to be asking for.
At least not the demo version. Looking to the helpfiles the demo version
has less options for tweaking. The first "dirty" conversions what I
made, I was not impressed by the quality, from the results what I have
already with the other applications.
--
Vr.groet - regards, Léon Obers
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