VideoHelp Forum




+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 8 of 8
  1. I was just curious about this dvd2one, does it re-encode the movie if its to big to fit on one dvdr ?
    If so is the quality as good as the results that CCE does.?
    Quote Quote  
  2. yes it does transcode movies bigger than 4.37 gigs and makes them fit onto 1 dvd-r. I would say that the quality may be a little less than that given using CCE, but the difference is very minimal.
    Quote Quote  
  3. new version seems interesting, you can make ur own
    file sizes, so one can add menus or such
    Quote Quote  
  4. If you read the german magazine -- The encoding it's totally different...

    DVD2ONE does block endocing while CCE or others do Frame Encoding...

    Do a search for dvd2one german magazine and you can find out all about it.

    dhluke
    Quote Quote  
  5. Member Super Warrior's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Location
    United States
    Search Comp PM
    Originally Posted by musher70
    new version seems interesting, you can make ur own
    file sizes, so one can add menus or such

    Thats what you think....

    Unfortunitly DVD2one still leaves much to be desired.
    Quote Quote  
  6. So whats the difference between block and frame encodeing ? .... and is there much of a difference in quality.i.e. with say 4 pass vbr.

    I searched for what u said and i got 1 result on google,buts its all german and i cant read german.
    Quote Quote  
  7. DVD2OnE is written in assembly a very old way to encode write down to how PC's talk I'm not a programmer but I ask a friend of mine and he said any one that program's in assembly is very good. CCE is real made to encode AVI file's to MPEG2 for people that make there own movie's CCE is little better but not much. I use both and when I use DVD2ONE. But if you want to encode a old movie You might want to use CCE old movie's are not that encode that well
    Quote Quote  
  8. Member
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Location
    United States
    Search Comp PM
    actually assembly isn't an old way to code, just a low-level way. this gives the CPU the most possible instructions per cycle (without writing in hex/machine code)

    Andy
    Quote Quote  



Similar Threads

Visit our sponsor! Try DVDFab and backup Blu-rays!