by Exeter » Sat Sep 17, 2011 11:36 pm
For the thread: It appears to me that MP4s encoded with h264 and played back using ffh264 will give unpredictable results on older systems like mine (Windows 2003/Pentium 4). It appears that shorter files (0-40 minutes) will play mostly fine, while longer files (60 minutes plus) will show some stutter and/or desynchronised sound. Without more than gut feel to guide me, I think the playback problems are probably caused by CPU stutter during decompression; ergo, this problem is likely to be absent on newer systems.
Disabling ffh264 and using CoreAVC does not appear to offer any significant improvement, and is not recommended by me, particularly since CoreAVC is not free.
However, encoding MPEG1/2 files, such as those generated by recording digital TV, using the Xvid MPEG4 part 2 codec appears to offer compression and quality results similar to h264 with no discernible negative effects on playback in standard SMPlayer/MPlayer combos.
My workaround for MP4s I may want to keep is to re-encode as Xvid avis. This will probably mean loss of quality by downsampling, but c'est la vie.
For redxii: For the time being I have finished looking at this problem, but I will post again if I have any startling new insights. Thank you so much for your time and persistence in answering my questions.
[b]For the thread:[/b] It appears to me that MP4s encoded with h264 and played back using ffh264 will give unpredictable results on older systems like mine (Windows 2003/Pentium 4). It appears that shorter files (0-40 minutes) will play mostly fine, while longer files (60 minutes plus) will show some stutter and/or desynchronised sound. Without more than gut feel to guide me, I think the playback problems are probably caused by CPU stutter during decompression; ergo, this problem is likely to be absent on newer systems.
Disabling ffh264 and using CoreAVC does not appear to offer any significant improvement, and is not recommended by me, particularly since CoreAVC is not free.
However, encoding MPEG1/2 files, such as those generated by recording digital TV, using the Xvid MPEG4 part 2 codec appears to offer compression and quality results similar to h264 with no discernible negative effects on playback in standard SMPlayer/MPlayer combos.
My workaround for MP4s I may want to keep is to re-encode as Xvid avis. This will probably mean loss of quality by downsampling, but c'est la vie.
[b]For redxii:[/b] For the time being I have finished looking at this problem, but I will post again if I have any startling new insights. Thank you so much for your time and persistence in answering my questions.