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  1. Sorry don't know if this question has been answered but I need some help

    what is the difference between soft, neutral, and sharp?
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  2. Mod Neophyte redwudz's Avatar
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    I doubt anyone here can really answer that as we have absolutely no idea what you are referring to. What program? Or what setting? Video? Audio?

    You need to supply a lot more information.

    And welcome to our forums.
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  3. what context ? sharpness of scaling algorithms ?
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  4. Member
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    ...or perhaps in context to intestinal pressure?
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  5. Member AlanHK's Avatar
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    Originally Posted by noobiestudent View Post
    Sorry don't know if this question has been answered but I need some help

    what is the difference between soft, neutral, and sharp?
    A "soft" wine has less tannin.
    A "sharp" wine is a bit sour.
    "Neutral" is an absence of any character. Inoffensive, but boring.
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  6. Originally Posted by redwudz View Post
    I doubt anyone here can really answer that as we have absolutely no idea what you are referring to. What program? Or what setting? Video? Audio?

    You need to supply a lot more information.

    And welcome to our forums.
    sorry about that, like I'm trying to re-encode animes to small mkv size.
    I'm messing with mini coder for right now
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  7. http://www.minicoder.minitech.org/index.php?title=Settings_Tab#Resize

    Resizing algorithms:
    (less sharp) Soft - Neutral - Sharp (more sharp)
    (less sharp) Bilinear - Bicubic - Lanczos (more sharp)

    Which you want to use will depend on your source. If the source is very sharp using a sharp resizing filter will lead to over sharpening halos. If the video is noisy a less sharp filter will reduce the noise a little, a sharp filter will increase the noise. Both Bicubic and Lanczos sharpen. Bilinear blurs but is more natural looking.
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  8. Originally Posted by jagabo View Post
    http://www.minicoder.minitech.org/index.php?title=Settings_Tab#Resize

    Resizing algorithms:
    (less sharp) Soft - Neutral - Sharp (more sharp)
    (less sharp) Bilinear - Bicubic - Lanczos (more sharp)

    Which you want to use will depend on your source. If the source is very sharp using a sharp resizing filter will lead to over sharpening halos. If the video is noisy a less sharp filter will reduce the noise a little, a sharp filter will increase the noise. Both Bicubic and Lanczos sharpen. Bilinear blurs but is more natural looking.
    thanks jagabo
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