Difference between revisions of "Movie Downloading Guide"

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== Video Formats and Size Rule ==
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As of 2010 the most desirable video format, for the best combination of compression (reduced file size) and quality (near [[Blu-ray]]) is the [[H.264]] video format.  A near second is the [[Xvid]] video format. 
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Too much quality:  At some point quality becomes irrelevant as the human eye cannot discern the difference.  Depending on your playback medium, this is a general rule with practical application.  Ask yourself, why do we need more video resolution than our human eyes can perceive?
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Bit Rate to Source mismatch:  Amateur video rippers (people that encode video and share it on the Internet) vary in intelligence and knowledge of the subject.  Watch out for videos encoded in a high bitrate but are from a low quality source.  You can't bring back quality.  If the video source is crap, there's no point in encoding the video with excess quality.  You are just making a big file full of mush.  Garbage in, Garbage out.
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If downloading a movie that is about 1hr and 30 min to 2hr playback time, use the following charge as a general rule for the best quality to size match.
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#H.264 Video: The file size should not exceed 700mb.  (500mb is fine)  150mb per every 30 minutes. DVD or higher quality.
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#XviD Video: The file size should not exceed 900mb.  (700mb is fine) expect DVD quality
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#MPG1 Video: The file size should not exceed 2000mb.  (1200 - 1400 is ok) expect VHS quality
  
 
 
 
 

Latest revision as of 11:02, 30 September 2010

Video Formats and Size Rule

As of 2010 the most desirable video format, for the best combination of compression (reduced file size) and quality (near Blu-ray) is the H.264 video format. A near second is the Xvid video format.

Too much quality: At some point quality becomes irrelevant as the human eye cannot discern the difference. Depending on your playback medium, this is a general rule with practical application. Ask yourself, why do we need more video resolution than our human eyes can perceive?

Bit Rate to Source mismatch: Amateur video rippers (people that encode video and share it on the Internet) vary in intelligence and knowledge of the subject. Watch out for videos encoded in a high bitrate but are from a low quality source. You can't bring back quality. If the video source is crap, there's no point in encoding the video with excess quality. You are just making a big file full of mush. Garbage in, Garbage out.

If downloading a movie that is about 1hr and 30 min to 2hr playback time, use the following charge as a general rule for the best quality to size match.

  1. H.264 Video: The file size should not exceed 700mb. (500mb is fine) 150mb per every 30 minutes. DVD or higher quality.
  2. XviD Video: The file size should not exceed 900mb. (700mb is fine) expect DVD quality
  3. MPG1 Video: The file size should not exceed 2000mb. (1200 - 1400 is ok) expect VHS quality