Im using wondershare on my mac to store them on a external hardrive so i can bring it anywhere i go. I've been using apple tv mpeg-4 720x432 but was wondering if i use h.264 1280x720 will it be better quality. It seems to take about 2 times as long to copy the movies if i use h.264. Or is there a better format to use? Sprry if this is an easy topic.. im just kinda new to this and theres so much info on here i dont even know where to start...
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 6 of 6
-
-
What is your source ?
If it is SD (DVD or downloaded material) then there is nothing to be gained by upscaling to 1280 x 720. The quality will likely be lower, and if it is taking only twice as long, almost certainly the quality will be far lower.Read my blog here.
-
Then keep it simple and encode them as SD resolutions (i.e. 720 x nnn). Unless you are using a super-resolution type upsampler, simply resizing up to 720p resolution will do nothing by require far larger bitrates while producing a far softer image.
I would still encode to H264 for the best quality/size, however I would probably use quality based encoding. Unless you are intending to play the files back on an Apple TV, I would avoid using Apple TV settings as they are of medium quality due to limitations imposed by the device.Read my blog here.
-
So the larger the bitrate the softer the images...
Using the same dvd here are my options..
mpeg 2 movie -- 720 ---- 4000 kbps
avi xvid-----------640 ----- 1500
m4v Mpeg 4 -----640 ----- 1500
Mpeg 4 movie---640 ----- 1500
Apple tv mp4 --- 720 ---- 1500 kbps
appletv h264 --- 720----- 4000 kbps
Are the larger file sized ones just wasting my time and theyre all just as good.
I'm playing the movies back off of the external hardrive i have. I dont really care about the size of the files but just quality and time that it takes. Thanks again for your help! -
Not the larger the bitrate. The softness of the image comes from enlarging to 1280 x 720.
The only two I would question are the mpeg-2 files, where 4000 seems to be on the low side, but it depends on the actual video, and the H264 @ 4000, which seems high.
If you convert the mpeg-2 to H264 then you can probably get away with 1500 or thereabouts.
The Xvid/mpeg-4 (non-H264) material will only lose quality from being re-encoded, and probably doewsn't deserve a lower bitrate unless the quality is very low already.Read my blog here.
Similar Threads
-
Convert the .mkv files to a format my tv supports
By Goldenbrown in forum Video ConversionReplies: 3Last Post: 1st Dec 2011, 20:35 -
Help with H.264 questions, Choosing format for mastering, etc.
By RainMotorsports in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 0Last Post: 1st Dec 2011, 06:03 -
Help choosing format, codec, bitrate for better playability
By roboboticus in forum Video ConversionReplies: 3Last Post: 7th Jun 2010, 20:15 -
Need help choosing a video format for a website
By Victor Hen in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 4Last Post: 27th May 2010, 08:35 -
I need to choosing a video conversion format
By Cralis in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 17Last Post: 17th Jan 2010, 02:59