Active player (437)
Joined: 4/21/2004
Posts: 3517
Location: Stockholm, Sweden
Personally, I don't care if a file its 5 or 20% bigger than an "usual" encode. I think the quality (sound and picture) should be top notch, which means forget about compability. Update your codecs and if that wont work, buy a new computer. This is 2010, yes I am an elitist pig (at least when it comes to having supernice quality encodes).
Nitrogenesis wrote:
Guys I come from the DidyKnogRacist communite, and you are all wrong, tihs is the run of the mileniun and everyone who says otherwise dosnt know any bater! I found this run vary ease to masturbate too!!!! Don't fuck with me, I know this game so that mean I'm always right!StupedfackincommunityTASVideoz!!!!!!
Arc wrote:
I enjoyed this movie in which hands firmly gripping a shaft lead to balls deep in multiple holes.
natt wrote:
I don't want to get involved in this discussion, but as a point of fact C# is literally the first goddamn thing on that fucking page you linked did you even fucking read it
Cooljay wrote:
Mayor Haggar and Cody are such nice people for the community. Metro City's hospitals reached an all time new record of incoming patients due to their great efforts :P
Banned User
Joined: 3/10/2004
Posts: 7698
Location: Finland
AngerFist wrote:
Personally, I don't care if a file its 5 or 20% bigger than an "usual" encode. I think the quality (sound and picture) should be top notch, which means forget about compability.
Isn't that a bit contradictory? On one hand you don't care if the video file size grows moderately, but immediately in the next sentence you advocate using the latest experimental codecs, seemingly for maximum compression while preserving image quality. So which one is it? You want maximum quality/size ratio, or you don't care if the video file is a bit larger?
creaothceann
He/Him
Editor
Joined: 4/7/2005
Posts: 1874
Location: Germany
AngerFist wrote:
Personally, I don't care if a file its 5 or 20% bigger than an "usual" encode. I think the quality (sound and picture) should be top notch
Same here. For Youtube I usually encode audio (even NES & GB) at 256 kbps and video at 640x480 and the highest x264 settings, or lower until it's not more than ca. 200 MB for the 11 minutes limit.
AngerFist wrote:
which means forget about compability.
I just use CCCP and point users to them.