Hardware compliance does matter to many people because it is the traditional PC that is becoming passé as a video entertainment device at home. Dedicated hardware media players, streaming media players and tablets are a more popular option now, and people use them to watch video on their 55-inch TV.
If you think nobody buys TVs anymore, or watches TV, then you clearly don't know enough people.
Try StreamFab Downloader and download from Netflix, Amazon, Youtube! Or Try DVDFab and copy Blu-rays! or rip iTunes movies!
+ Reply to Thread
Results 31 to 43 of 43
Thread
-
-
What, nobody can hook up their 55-inch TV monitor to their PC and press play? Get real.
If you think nobody buys TVs anymore, or watches TV, then you clearly don't know enough people.
But anyway, I have found a suitable formula to properly detect duplicate patterns, the Microsoft experts were great:
Code:=IF(OR(AND(A2<$F$1*A1,A3<$F$1*A4),AND(A3<$F$1*A2,A3<$F$1*A4),AND(A3<$F$1*A2,A4<$F$1*A5)),0,A3)
The problem of non-duplicates being removed in scenes where a half-fps object runs in a full-fps background remains.
Sadly, I see little value this will have for videophiles as they'll consider it too destructive. -
-
-
-
-
If you're complicated enough to find, download and playback videos from the internet, you're complicated enough to hook your PC to your big TV screen without needing to go thru the much more hassling trouble of burning to a DVD or Blu-ray to be able to do so. And since most content on the internet isn't even compliant with that requirement, you would have to re-encode it and this somehow is the much-too-complicated part.
So can we shut the hell up with that retarded hardware-compliance argument? It wouldn't bother me so much if so many people who are otherwise intelligent didn't continue invoking it.
On Doom9 in 2006 a common conversation went something like this: MKV is awesome MKV is awesome use MKV, way better than MP4, MKV is the way of the future, dawg! Put even Xvid in it! Players will support it some day. H264 in AVI? HELL NAW NIGGA, that shit aint hardware compliant!
And look here, a useful, important senior member like Cornucopia making this same argument. You people I'll never be able to figure out. -
Does anyone know what the last two group of numbers encased in brackets means?
frm 220: diff from frm 221 = 0.9587% at (224,256) -
DeDup compares 32x32 blocks within the frames. The diff value reported is for the block with the biggest difference. The numbers in parenthesis are the X,Y location of that block.
-
-
The whole frame is compared block by block.
It's probably not useful in most cases. But I could imagine one might want to see where in the frame the differences are on occasion. For example, if a video has flickering analog closed caption data at the top of the frame they may cause duplicate frames to show up as non-duplicates. Knowing the CC data is the cause of the changes you might want to crop them away.
Similar Threads
-
Need advice on managing home videos (family stuff)
By zaerdy in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 21Last Post: 20th May 2015, 11:51 -
How do I backup data to CD or DVD and have the data encrypted?
By OM2 in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 4Last Post: 6th Mar 2011, 17:53 -
Can't see data on a DVD-RW ! Please help!
By Icaro in forum MediaReplies: 10Last Post: 20th Jan 2011, 04:45 -
Advise needed on managing digital video collection...
By nharikrishna in forum CapturingReplies: 2Last Post: 18th Jan 2011, 06:20 -
How to combine video data and audio data in realtime
By mudassar in forum Video Streaming DownloadingReplies: 0Last Post: 31st Aug 2010, 08:00