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There might be a newer one hosted somewhere else, I would ask @ D9 when you get registered There is talk about re-introducing slice support soon. The development of x264 really is at an incredible pace if you look over the last 2 years, there is a minor patch almost every day. I just want to warn you to be prepared because most GUI's and interfaces need changes every month or so to reflect the newest changes. For the RGB equations, the guys you want to talk to are clsid, madshi and a few others in the software playback forum @ D9. An initial slicing patch was done today, as PDR implies. We'll probably see it committed to the main build in a matter of weeks or even days, if the insane rate of progress recently is anything to go.
Rallymax, you might want to PM Lord Mulder (the guy who builds libx264). I think his builds may already include the NAL HRD patch.
At the very least, he seems to be very helpful and quite knowledgeable. Thanks for your hard work on this project. It's no doubt going to make powerful encoding much easier for a whole bunch of Premiere users. The presets are listed in, which is slightly outdated. They are (as of this posting): ultrafast (fastest / lowest quality) veryfast faster fast medium slow slower veryslow (as slow as you should go / best quality) placebo (pointlessly slow / bestest quality) To use them in, you use the --preset switch, e.g. --preset slower. I assume there's an analogous way to call libx264.
There are also the --tune and --profile switches, which will probably be important to include: --tune name where name = film, animation, grain, and a few other possibilities. --tune film should be used for movies and other film sources, and may also work well for video sources.
--tune animation is self-explanatory. --tune grain maximizes grain retention on source that have a lot of it.
--profile name where name = baseline, main or high. Assassins Creed Black Flag Crack Skidrow more. This allows users to ensure compliance with H.264 profiles, and overrides everything else. Snow Patrol A Hundred Million Suns Rar there. It's generally only necessary when you're targeting playback on specific devices or less capable decoders (e.g. When streaming HD maybe). The priority of these settings is: Presets. You might have already covered these, but for blu-ray / AVCHD some important settings are not reflected in the built in x264 presets: 1) GOP size (--min-keyint 2 --keyint 24); some other GUI's like have a larger GOP size, but on some standalones, you will notice pausing on FF/RW.
Pro encoders like Cinevision also uses these sizes and they are considered to be the most compatible 2) b-pyramid screws up playback on most SAPs and mediaboxes 3) buffer size is different for AVCHD on DVD media vs. True blu-ray on BD-R 25/50 media. This has to do with the rotation speed and density on the media. (--vbv-bufsize 30000 --vbv-maxrate 40000 is what works for me and used in most blu-ray profiles for BD25/50) Nice job rallymax! If you need beta tester, I'm available. You might have already covered these, but for blu-ray / AVCHD some important settings are not reflected in the built in x264 presets: 1) GOP size (--min-keyint 2 --keyint 24); some other GUI's like have a larger GOP size, but on some standalones, you will notice pausing on FF/RW.
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