X264 profile - trying to use Fabio Sonatti's settings
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question
Hi !
First of all, thanks for this helpfull topic, I hope we'll have some nice videos with those brilliant settings.
I have a question, when I encode a video of mine in AVI, with almost all video codecs the brightness goes very high. Any idea why and how disable this ? Is there an option somewhere for gamma or brightness setting ? It's really annoying when I have a pretty dark video, and when I encode it, it goes very bright and that's not beautifull, because I use some dark effects in Premiere, and they disapear after mediacoder encoding, whatever codec I use (XVid, h264, ...)
Thanks you for your help.
First of all, thanks for this helpfull topic, I hope we'll have some nice videos with those brilliant settings.
I have a question, when I encode a video of mine in AVI, with almost all video codecs the brightness goes very high. Any idea why and how disable this ? Is there an option somewhere for gamma or brightness setting ? It's really annoying when I have a pretty dark video, and when I encode it, it goes very bright and that's not beautifull, because I use some dark effects in Premiere, and they disapear after mediacoder encoding, whatever codec I use (XVid, h264, ...)
Thanks you for your help.
There is a brightness and contrast slider if you go into the picture tab and click on "effects".
Last edited by SirAuron on Tue Aug 26, 2008 10:03 pm, edited 2 times in total.
MediaCoder settings:
x264 (backend/source: mencoder, fps: 23,976, Fabio Sonatti's settings) + nero aac 64 in matroska
x264 (backend/source: mencoder, fps: 23,976, Fabio Sonatti's settings) + nero aac 64 in matroska
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Not only is it not illegal, but the video is already on your computer. You don't have to download it -- it puts it in your cache whether you like it or not.SirAuron wrote:Now that was an impressing video (and I think it's perfectly legal to get the video, says nowhere you shouldn't)!
Use Video Cache View (google it ... i can't post a url) to see what videos are in your cache and retrieve them if you'd like.
Then open it with Media Info (google it...it's at sourceforge) and you've got all the information that B!ink gave.