John is there not a point where reduction in the Mbit becomes detremintal to the current codecs being used? It seems to me that the real jump in PQ of DVD happened when that second layer started being used -- not better compression technque.
So you believe that there is not a point a which compression starts to lose continuity in comparison to the orginal ?
Stacey Spears made this comment last week about x264 (Open Source implementation of the H.264 codec):H.264 has only seen about a 20% improvement from last year. That's still quite a sizable improvement.
And although HD/BD compliant AVC encoding remains a bit of a mystery (NDA-ed specs),I finally got around to looking at the x264 encode of ED. (12 Mbps version) and it looks great!
None of the AVC encoders used for HD DVD or BD are as good as the x264 encoder.
He is the only one MS employee (at least that I know) that the doom9 gang respects and is not looking for political motives in his posts.That's why I appreciate Stacey's friendship -- he's honest even if the answer isn't what people want to hear.
I got the impression he was there from the very beginning, the famous first encodings at 7.7 Mbps that beat some of the 3x MPEG-2....he actually works on the VC-1 encoder. He does however work with some of the best compressionists in the business.
He is the only one MS employee (at least that I know) that the doom9 gang respects and is not looking for political motives in his posts.
Do you also know Don Munsil? I loved reading his posts on AVS but his stint there was short...
Diogen.
I got the impression he was there from the very beginning, the famous first encodings at 7.7 Mbps that beat some of the 3x MPEG-2.
Diogen.