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9th December 2009, 23:42 | #21 | Link | |
Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 12
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Quote:
Maybe Encore is just being a bitch. Honestly, if Adobe Encore is supposedly targeted at professional video producers it should at least throw a warning message saying "GOP length is too high" or similar instead of just removing the "Don't Transcode" option... |
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10th December 2009, 00:45 | #22 | Link | |
Spielberger
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 838
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It is definitly explained in users guide
From CCE SP 2.70 Userīs Guide Quote:
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10th December 2009, 08:06 | #23 | Link |
Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 12
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While reading your post it all came back to me... I just remembered that I had already read those "rules" in Cinema Craft Encoder SP2 User’s Guide Version 1.10. Specifically the "When you apply 3:2 pulldown, do not set 00:00:00:00 as a timecode for the first frame." bit. I always leave it at 01:00:00:00, anyway.
Thanks for gathering that info, mate. |
12th December 2009, 12:31 | #24 | Link |
Big Bit Savings Now !
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: close to the wall
Posts: 1,738
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DLP does not check streams thoroughly, only reads headers and relies on this information.
That makes DLP fast, but not foolproof. With DLP as compressionist I am anyways responsible to know what I'm doing. DLP tends just to warn about OpenGOPs, (which is a bit unnecessary and can be turned off) and muxes happily on. For Film on DVD (23.976p soft pulldowned to NTSC 29.97i) a GOP size of max 14, better 12 is recommended. |
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avisynth, cce, dvdlab, encore, transcode |
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