• badbrainstorm@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    In this day and age of compression, you can get a very small file in good quality.

    If your hardware will run it, MKV/265 is fantastic! Especially the 10 bit rips

    • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      2 days ago

      Every time I pirate something x265, it looks like somebody took the pixels and threw it in the blender. Like I could notice the degredation in quality and it irritates me since it’s supposed to be 1080p.

      I download the normal x264 and everything looks fine.

      And I doing piracy incorrectly?

      • badbrainstorm@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        265 is more bandwidth efficient than 264. If you put two video streams next to each other, 100% identical, running at the same bitrate, except one is H.264 and one is 265, 265 will look better.

        265 can achieve the same visual fidelity as 264 at 20-40% lower bitrate, depending on a few factors. The trade off is you need more processing.

        If either are looking pixilated, you’re getting ones with to much compression. I still try and get ones at around a gig or larger. Especially if you’re watching on a big screen. And like I said, if your hardware will run it without getting all laggy, 10 or 12 bit is good for rgb color depth

      • Nollij@sopuli.xyz
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        2 days ago

        The issue is that, while x265 is more efficient, it’s not THAT much more efficient until you get to 4k or high bitrates. Encoders using x265 tend to be overly focused on file size, and prioritize it over video quality. And that sort of makes sense - x265 needs a lot more decoding power, and excludes a lot of otherwise capable devices. Why would you do that to only save a small percentage of the space needed?

          • Victor@lemmy.world
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            18 hours ago

            H.265 isn’t a container format, it’s an encoding format. You have to have a container to hold the encoded video stream, whether it be MKV, MP4, etc.

            • occultist8128@infosec.pub
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              18 hours ago

              i know. that’s what i’m asking. which one is better, H265 with MP4 as container (since it’s the standard) or MKV as container… i do transcoding a lot but haven’t experienced using MKV as the container. that’s why i’m asking.

              • Victor@lemmy.world
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                18 hours ago

                MKV is open, so I prefer that. My TV and Plex/Jellyfin also plays them fine. So I tend to prefer that. It’s also more powerful than MP4 if I’m not mistaken? Like it can hold subtitles and stuff? I don’t remember off the top of my head.

                (Also the piracy scene tends to prefer MKV nowadays as far as I can tell. At least for larger stuff like movies and long-episode television series.)

          • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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            1 day ago

            I don’t think it’s got a hardware decoder in it for AV1. Whether it can play is very much dependent on the file.

            I can’t see the extra pixels, but they tend to be the only versions with Dolby Vision, etc. I do think the HDR version looks better.

              • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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                1 day ago

                It’s mostly handled with GPU acceleration, yes. But it’s a fairly recent addition. Certainly newer than my Shield Pro (which they don’t seem to have updated since).

                CPU alone would require a decent processor. Certainly at 4K. It knows the format, but smooth playback either happens or it doesn’t depending on the file.