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  1. Member
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    Jun 2010
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    Ottawa, ON, CA
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    Hello all,

    I have recently decided to transfer my DVD collection to my computer - I have a PS3 with a large hard drive, and want to transfer my library on it. I had tried a few times in the past, but had never been able to find a program that did exactly what I wanted it to do. This time around, I tried a few free alternatives, before deciding to use Fairuse Wizard - which does a fair enough job, I find. During that first round of research, I also somehow came to the conclusion that I should use x264 and not xvid to encode (noob mistake, as I would later discover, since I'm using an avi container).

    After ripping a few DVDs, I discovered that, while x264-in-avi plays well on my computer, it is not recognized by my PS3. Bummer. Upon doing further research, I also discovered that x264 in avi is generally a bad idea. I therefore decided to restart the process, this time using xvid, which plays flawlessly on the PS3, as well.

    Size is not an issue here, and I focus more on quality. The speed of completion is a bit of a factor. Because of this, I used the following settings when encoding:

    x264: Single pass, constant quantizer (=18), AC3 sound.
    xvid: Single pass, constant quantizer (=2), AC3 sound.

    Generally, I find the image quality to be comparable between rips of the same movie. However, I have noticed that there is significantly more "noise" or "artifacts" around text (such as credits, etc) using xvid than with x264. Why is that? See end of the post for a screencap of a movie encoded with xvid.
    (alternatively, click here: http://i424.photobucket.com/albums/pp325/Nyriador/Screencap1xvid.png )

    See the artifacts around the text? It was a lot less noticeable in the x264 version (which I unfortunately destroyed, so I can't really post it for comparison. I really should be less impulsive...).

    So, my question: Why would there be more "artifacts" with xvid? And is there a way to diminish this?

    Cheers!

    Nyriador
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  2. So, my question: Why would there be more "artifacts" with xvid? And is there a way to diminish this?
    Those edge artifacts common to xvid are compression artifacts and DCT ringing

    x264 encoder offers much better compression. This implies at a given bitrate, it will be higher quality than xvid (if used properly)

    you cannot compare "quality" if the filesizes are different. This means they use different bitrate because filesize=bitrate x running time

    you can play back h.264 in PS3 , just remux the container to mp4 (e.g. use YAMB or mp4box)
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  3. Member
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    Jun 2010
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    Ottawa, ON, CA
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    Thanks for the reply!

    Just out of curiosity : the filesize of both files is almost the same (the xvid one is smaller by about 150 mb, and we're talking about roughly 2 gb files). I'm going to assume this just proves .h264 is superior to xvid?
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  4. You can do a search , there are many many comparison threads. It's not even a debate. x264 is vastly superior to xvid in every way (even encoding speed for a certain level qualilty if you have an i7 or better cpu). Even hardware support for AVC is better than xvid these days (e.g. portable devices, phones, media boxes) - it used to be sparse for AVC
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  5. Member
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    Jun 2010
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    Ottawa, ON, CA
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    Ok, thanks!
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