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#41 | |
Active Member
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![]() Let me put this as simple as possible. Everything else being equal: source, master, encoding tools and settings, a lower bitrate video will NEVER look better than a higher bitrate one, AND the higher bitrate video will ALWAYS have MORE DETAIL than the lower bitrate video. How can I say this with certainty? It's very simple really, because if the bitrate had already been maxed out with the lower bitrate, a higher bitrate would not be possible, since the codec would not be able to use it. Now, in SOME cases the higher detail available with a higher bitrate may not be that noticable, but it IS there. Likewise, in many cases the differences can be very noticable, especially on hard to encode, bitrate starved scenes. It's the same principle as with jpg images, you may or may not notice the difference between different quality settings, but if the file size is lower, the detail level will be lower too. |
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#42 |
Power Member
![]() Aug 2007
North Potomac, MD
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For those that are interested, I got an older thread restarted on AVS:
"Codec Wars" : The attempt of an objective AVC/h.264 versus VC-1 benchmark http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=883667 Also, some real technical experts from Doom9 are participating this may get very interesting! ![]() |
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#43 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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![]() ![]() ![]() The point, I was aiming to make is that there are ways to have No Gain from increased bandwidth. Not negative gain, but No Gain. [ Add / Edit ] And I'm sorry for derailing it like this PaulGo, pretty interested in the codec tests, just frustrated at the side comments. Last edited by reiella; 01-31-2008 at 03:00 PM. |
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#44 |
Expert Member
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I have read into the AVC vs. VC-1 debate and what I found was that at low bitrates AVC held up much better and offered more detail.
At high bitrates AVC/VC-1 looked virtually identical and arguments which was better at this level of bitrate was trivial or academic. So in general I would prefer AVC, but if studios offered only high bitrate encodes VC-1 would be just as good. Just look at Shoot'em Up. Its a medium to highbitrate encode thats too high for HD players to support. The sharpness and level of facial detail is incredible in it. Last edited by UTVOL06; 01-31-2008 at 03:25 PM. |
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#45 | |
Senior Member
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agreed. we should be more concerned about whether studios are willing to utilize available bandwidth on blu-ray rather than which codec is used. |
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#46 | |
Power Member
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Yet in practice I find (or think I find) that my homebrewed mp4 rips sometimes come out looking better than the UMD mp4s. Playing back from flash memory, I have the advantage of being able to exceed 1.8 GB per movie (the limit of a UMD disc) and so can use a high fixed bitrate of up to 3Mbps, a higher CBR than the pro rips. (Like the UMDs I also rip to 720x480 mp4 AVC using main profile 3.) ** Edit-- the professionally produced versions almost certainly don't use fixed bitrate! I have viewed about 40 UMDs and have home rips that look better than any of them. When I get round to it I'm going to do a direct comparison using the DVD version of one of the titles I own on UMD. Is it counterintuitive that a high bitrate video from a lossy low-res source should look better than a slighly lower bitrate video from a lossless higher-res source? The simple program I'm using (psp video 9) doesn't let me look under the hood and see exactly what's going on behind my profiles, and even if it did, as a beginner I probably wouldn't understand it. Last edited by Teazle; 02-02-2008 at 04:40 PM. |
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#47 |
Special Member
Jun 2007
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Absolutely, that is the key question, together with whether studios want to put in gimmicky "bonus" features when the consequence is to compromise PQ and AQ on the movie itself.
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#48 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#49 | ||
Power Member
![]() Aug 2007
North Potomac, MD
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This is from AVS I was responding to a question and Richard Casey had a interesting response.
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#50 |
Special Member
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#51 |
Blu-ray Guru
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He's referencing the past tense I believe. He was part of the 'we' at the time when alot of the development happened on the vc-1.
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#52 | |
Super Moderator
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Kris Deering just posted this on AVSforum:
Quote:
http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=996498 |
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#53 |
Power Member
![]() Aug 2007
North Potomac, MD
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Interesting discussion on AVS:
From:Richard J. Casey R&B Films, Ltd. Thanks for the feedback. I found that info online. http://dostudio.netblender.com/wikipapers/Encoders1.asp Nature's Journey was an early HD-DVD / BD release and we used the latest and greatest and most current version of VC-1 that was available at the time. Technicolor did the encodes. Honestly, I understand your need to promote CODEC and Technology as part of your obligation to your employer ... and your commitment to the development team. I have no such affiliations, obligations, or loyalty to be concerned with. We honestly see diffrences between them ... as I am sure you yourself would admit ... otherwise ... one would not be any different from the other. For anyone to claim VC-1 is better immediatley confirms there is a difference and leaves the discussion open to debate regarding AVC verses VC-1. I am not here to debate as I am already sold on AVC and so are all of the authoring houses I have spoken with. VC-1 is good ... and I would use it in some applications depending on content. I find AVC ... compared to the flavors of VC-1 I have tried .... looks sharper and more detailed, handles blacks and shadow detail better, and appears to take better advantage of the additional bandwidth I tend to give my encodes. These are only my observations. I am not here to promote or bash one or the other. However, I do have some special edition High Bit Rate releases coming out in 4th quarter and I will be using Tiger. I woudl be happy to do test encodes using the latest version of VC-1 and do a new comparison to Tiger. If you can help me cooirdinate something like this I will be happy to revisit AVC verses VC-1. I would even be willing to put the test encodes on any of my upcoming releases as an Easter Egg for AVS Forum fans. Who can you recommend for a test encode at 36mbps to 38mbps using VC-1 with our content? WHo is the best encoding technician you know? I will be happy to give this a try. Quote: Originally Posted by benwaggoner The SDK is an implementation. Scenarist is an authoring tool. Do you mean CineVision? Original flavor or PSE? What version? You'll get massive differences in VC-1 output between Cinevision and Cinevision PSE. And there are a very wide array of improvements between the original PSE release and the current one being used for many Blu-ray titles today. As far as I know, your original disc is the only widely released title done with the non-PSE Cinevision VC-1 encoder, so is not representative of any other VC-1 HD DVD or Blu-ray titles. This is something that the Hollywood compression houses have always felt was something that our tools did extremely well. So what are they comparing Tiger to? Ah. If that's the only one you tried, than you haven't been exposed to the VC-1 that is being used for actual discs. Right now, we like Tiger. Even the $300,000 "dumbed down" version of Tiger ... the Tiger Cub .... incorporates some of the most important technology only available with Tiger ... so I have been told. Rumor also has it that Sony's new AVC Encoder uses some proprietary Tiger technology. Tiger is not for sale but would probably cost a fortune if it was. We are using the the proprietary Tiger Encoder at Technicolor for all of our future projects at this point. It appears to do a great job. Where did you find THAT? It's not helpful to consumers, it's just factually wrong. "There are numerous licensing entities involved in the VC-1 standard which has lead to the greatest number of encoders falsely claiming BD output"? The sole licensing entity for VC-1 is MPEG-LA, the same entity that does MPEG-2 and H.264. And encoders falsely claiming BD output? I've never even heard a rumor about that. "...very few Blu-ray titles have used this codec"? Manifestly false. All three codecs have seen quite a bit of use, and there are certainly many more new titles using VC-1 than MPEG-2. __________________ Richard J. Casey --------------------- R&B Films, Ltd. Producers Guild of America, New Media Council http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showt...3#post14114923 |
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#56 |
Senior Member
Sep 2007
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All else being the same, the CABAC entropy encode (lossless compression in the last stage) of AVC still beats VC-1's use of VLC. Remember that CABAC is a form of lossless compression based on arithmetic coding. VLC is based on huffman coding. It take some familirity to understand that unlike lossy compression comparisons (which is so subjective that people can play tricks till the cows come home to make outlandish claims that it's a waste of time to play that game) one form of lossless compression can be proven to be superior the same way (for example, you take a file, compress using zip and rar and look at the resulting file size --- across a wide sample of inputs, you can then draw your own conclusions).
In a large sample of streams, CABAC yields a 10-15% size savings over CAVLC. As for the internals of the codec itself, in HD resolution, VC-1 advanced profile is better than AVC's Main profile, but h.264 has a HighProfile FRExt. And h.264 HighProfile (with 8x8 transforms) imo is just a little bit better than VC-1 if we ignore the entropy encode side and stop at syntax elements. The world has moved to h.264 in broadcast TV (check what all european, asian, south american and north america standards bodies controlling TV broadcast have mandated as the replacement for MPEG2) and non-ms supported iptv. Other than being less processor intensive, there is no reason for VC-1 or WMV9 to live. Even microsoft no longer has a team that actively supports further work on it. The point really is that it is difficult to get onto the technical argument and it really is a waste of time since that bar can move so easily. You bring up PSNR or JND error, and people can say subjective tests are better. You try to organize a subjective test and people try to game the process by playing with selection of inputs that perform better on one codec, you try to widen the number of streams and people ask for more time to wait for the other stream before they optimize their own encode to beat codecA. Then codecA can be further optimized to beat codecB's implementation. In the end, it's close enough technically that it won't matter. FWIW, VC-1 syntax elements are simpler and smaller than AVC's even if their entropy encoding is weaker. But noone cares about this stuff. In the end, the reality is that there is no future for VC-1 --- the template for this is .ARJ files, it never really kept pace with .ZIP, and it died out, but now .RAR is giving .ZIP some competition. Other than companies forced (or paid) to build a decoder for it to handle some esoteric applications that has VC-1, noone if going to do any R&D on building a chip to do VC-1 compression. We will never see a HD camcorder that uses VC-1, we will not see broadcast equipment that uses hardware VC-1 compression --- no chip exists and no chip ever will support VC-1 compression in hardware. Last edited by Neo65; 06-19-2008 at 10:12 PM. |
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#58 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Actually the dominating video codecs is AVC (H.264) and HEVC (H.265). Blu-ray and UHD Blu-ray use these, no VP9. VP9 has a replacement in AV-1, VVC (H.266) will most likely be used if 8K should ever gain any traction.
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