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arnaudsmyesterday at 4:46 PM1 replyview on HN

What's the optimal strategy then ? 50 GB Blu-ray remux => 3 GB AV1 ?


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dragontameryesterday at 5:39 PM

50GB gives assurances that the BluRays are high quality (but not always. I've seen some horrible BluRay encodings...)

As long as you are going from high quality sources, you should be fine. The issue is each transcoding step is a glorified loop-(find something we think humans can't see and delete it)

In other words: the AV1 encoder in your example works by finding 47GBs of data TO DELETE. It's simply gone, vanished. That's how lossy compression works, delete the right things and save space.

In my experience, this often deletes purposeful noise out of animation (there are often static noise / VHS like effects in animation and film to represent flashbacks, these lossy decoders think it's actually noise and just deleted it all changing the feel of some scenes).

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More importantly: what is your plan with the 50GB BluRays? When AV2 (or any other future codec) comes out, you'll want to work off the 50GB originals and not off the 3GB AV1 compressed copies.

IMO, just work with the 50GB originals. Back them up, play them as is.

I guess AV1 compression is useful if you have a limited bandwidth (do you stream them out of your basement, across the internet and to your phone or something? I guess AV1 is good for that) But for most people just working with the 50GB originals is the best plan

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