Hi - On Wed, 12 Nov 2003, John Ribera wrote:
> Did I just hear elimination of B frames: Not exactly ;) They are optional now though so you can choose if you want/need them or not. > 1) lowers bitrate, ie file size In some cases - mostly with noisy sources. Good clean (D8, DV) input will not benefit as much (might even grow a few percent). > 2) improves output It's supposed to improve output in the high motion scenes, true. > 3) faster encoding (ok so i'm reaching) Not at all. B frames are much more cpu intensive than I or P frames to compute - not generating B frames brings a fairly substantial boost in encoding speed. > so, basically, unless you're editing, B frames are a 3 strike out, IMO. Two strikes - the B frames have a place and perhaps just using 1 of them ("-R 1") would be a Good Thing in some cases. There's no hard rules for "always use feature XXX" or "never use feature YYYY". Encoding is very sensitive to the source of the data as well as the other parameters being used - it could well be that using the high resolution quantizing matrices with the "-E -10" option will work better using 1 B frame than leaving out the B frames completely. Encoding the data multiple times to try out various combinations is a time consuming but necessary job in some cases. Obviously for casual viewing (and discarding of the movie after viewing) it's not important to select the "best" parameters. When making DVDs for archival or viewing by a wider audience then it can be worth the time to do several trial encodings and select the best looking one. Cheers, Steven Schultz ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email sponsored by: ApacheCon 2003, 16-19 November in Las Vegas. Learn firsthand the latest developments in Apache, PHP, Perl, XML, Java, MySQL, WebDAV, and more! http://www.apachecon.com/ _______________________________________________ Mjpeg-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/mjpeg-users