On Fri, 2004-01-02 at 14:28, Steven M. Schultz wrote:
>       cvs update works wonders ;)

Indeed, if you have the time to manage software in such a manner.

>       I put the stuff into MP4 containers with AAC audio and MPEG4 video.

MP4 containers huh?  I will have to take a look.  Do they overcome 2G
file limitations?

>       Not only useable with mplayer but ALSO with Apple's Quicktime player.    
>       The couple things you'll need are the AAC encoder ("faac" from 
>       www.audiocoding.com I believe) and 'mp4creator' (a small part of
>       the rather large MPEG4IP project).

Thanx!

>       No, a set-top box is the DVD player that John Q. Public gets at
>       Best Buy or Fry's or whatever.   A computer is not considered a STB.

Yeah, but I am not talking about semantics here.  Why is a "STB/DVD"
player more suited to MPEG2 than a computer?  Or are you just reflecting
the current status in the STB market?

>       I thought ffmpeg's mpeg4 encoding was interlaced aware.

I am not sure to tell the truth.  My results sure do look interlaced.  I
just don't know how well suited to field based encoding mpeg4 is.  I had
always understood that mpeg2 was more suited to field based encoding
like television destined material.

>       With mpeg4 though you can cut the bitrate down considerably below
>       what mpeg2 requires.   ~2000 kbits/sec is more than enough for general
>       mpeg4 use

I use 2500 kbits/sec on full frame (i.e. no cropping, no
inverse-telecining), and reduce appropriately from there (i.e. 2000
kbits/sec when inverse-telecined).

>  and that's a _long_ movie at 2GB

1 full hour is slightly more than 1GB, so anything 2+ hours blows the
2GB limitations.

b.

-- 
My other computer is your Microsoft Windows server.

Brian J. Murrell

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