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8th August 2012, 17:12 | #1 | Link |
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Anything like DivX vs XviD vs x264 2012 tests?
Im interested which one is better in 2012,
Back in the days of DivX 3.11 and nanDub there wasnt XviD. Later XviD came out, and became (probably?) better than DivX 3. How are they compared in 2012 with the latest releases? I saw few screenshots, DivX vs XviD, the results from what i saw was that XviD has sharper image (better), DivX has smoother image (worse), but DivX has slightly better colors than XviD. Also, what about the filesize, encoding and decoding speed (which one can be played on weaker pc)? If latest DivX is smoother than XviD, than maybe it can be compared with x264 for HD content? Last edited by zmejce; 2nd September 2012 at 15:27. |
8th August 2012, 20:47 | #2 | Link | |
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I don't think much has changed in the MPEG-4 ASP world.
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Anything can be compared with x264 but I know DivX doesn't compare well to x264, HD or not. Last edited by Asmodian; 8th August 2012 at 21:56. Reason: fixed H.264 = mpeg-4 confusion |
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8th August 2012, 21:06 | #3 | Link |
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it should be written as
mpeg-4 asp (divx,xvid...) mpeg-4 avc or h.264 (x264,atheme...)
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8th August 2012, 23:51 | #6 | Link | |
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See also: http://x264.nl/developers/Dark_Shika...e/compare.html
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9th August 2012, 00:44 | #7 | Link | |
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According to them, x264 is best, then DivX, then others (maybe XviD, & a good mp2 encoder should be similar to -original source- screenshots). Which birate do you recommend for HQ rip at 720x480 res. from dvd? Last edited by zmejce; 9th August 2012 at 01:26. |
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9th August 2012, 09:24 | #8 | Link |
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9th August 2012, 20:19 | #9 | Link |
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I don't understand what you what to know. Are you really thinking Xvid might be better quality compared to x264?
Currently x264 is accepted as the highest quality video encoder available. I think this is true even counting the many thousands of dollars encoder packages (they offer other advantages of course) but it certainly true compared to the cheap or free options. MPEG-4 ASP (Xvid, Divx) is a simpler standard that's easier to decode, as such it cannot achieve the same quality per size. This is even more true of MPEG2. Which bit rate to use is up to you just make sure it is the same for all comparison encodes. |
9th August 2012, 23:03 | #11 | Link | |
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But on 1080p, x264 is absolutely best. |
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10th August 2012, 08:01 | #12 | Link | |
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If someone were to ask me, I'd say x264 is better than Xvid. No doubt. No room for discussion. Very occasionally though, and I can't quite put my finger on it... sometimes when encoding low quality sources, Xvid seems a little more pleasing to the eye to me. Probably because it's not as good at retaining detail so where normally you'd lose some fine detail (compared to x264) you lose some of the unwanted noise or compression artifacts instead. Just a theory anyway.... but for 99% of the video I encode, I'd use x264, and I don't think I'd ever say Xvid was sharper or clearer. |
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12th August 2012, 22:21 | #13 | Link | |
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Maybe that was your problem? If it was a theatrical source (e.g. a movie), you wouldn't deinterlace it |
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15th August 2012, 03:17 | #14 | Link | |
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16th August 2012, 16:26 | #15 | Link |
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QUOTE by hello_hello
If someone were to ask me, I'd say x264 is better than Xvid. No doubt. No room for discussion. Very occasionally though, and I can't quite put my finger on it... sometimes when encoding low quality sources, Xvid seems a little more pleasing to the eye to me. Probably because it's not as good at retaining detail so where normally you'd lose some fine detail (compared to x264) you lose some of the unwanted noise or compression artifacts instead. Just a theory anyway.... but for 99% of the video I encode, I'd use x264, and I don't think I'd ever say Xvid was sharper or clearer. Have to agree too! Might also explain why if you use a high bitrate/high resolution x264 source and recompress it to avi, to find that it mostly comes out looking better than if you just encoded to avi/Xvid in the first place from your direct source to same specifications in my subjective opinion. The x264 has done all the hard work preserving the source detail etc, so all you are really doing is some fine tuning with Xvid and losing unwanted noise artifacts in the compression process rather like a fine tooth comb filtering process/sieve. Ironic since there are no denoise options built in Xvid unlike the option in DivX to remove noise during the encoding process. Last edited by datauser; 16th August 2012 at 16:46. |
2nd September 2012, 14:46 | #16 | Link |
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It might be strange, but DivX 6.9 1080p rip @ 7500kbps (2pass encoding and Highest quality setting) is better than x264 rip (with Handbrake's High Profile @ ~13.3Mbps).
Also, for DivX 2pass Insane Quality encodes, it takes half the time of x264 High Profile 1pass with Handbrake. Also DivX it's very light on the pc for decoding. TESTED ON 37" 1080 LED TV with vivid color setting and crystal clear image. BTW I was surprised when I saw a lot of dirty artifacts, from 2m distance from the TV on the x264 High Profile encodes that were ripped from Blu-Ray disc from ~40GB. DivX @ 7500kbps has dirty artifacts that can be seen only from being few inches away from the TV. x264 High Profile's dirty artifacts can't be seen on my 24" monitor, neither the ones from DivX (as they would probably be very hard to be noticed on 32" TV). Last edited by zmejce; 2nd September 2012 at 15:29. |
2nd September 2012, 18:36 | #17 | Link | |
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Are you sure you didn't mix them up? DivX @ 7.5Mbps vs. x264 @ 13.3Mbps There is no contest here . There must be a mistake somewhere Maybe you're misinterpreting the "dirty artifacts" - are you referring to grain in the original? Because x264 will do a better job at preserving the original quality (this includes grain) |
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2nd September 2012, 22:05 | #18 | Link |
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No, I'm not messing the stuff.
The videos that I've encoded were different for x264 and DivX, however the DivX is better in that case. I'll probably do tests to the same video when I'll have time and post screen shots. |
3rd September 2012, 11:59 | #20 | Link | |
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I've never seen image enhancements in a TV which I thought improved the picture. I can't imagine why people use them. The first thing I do when setting up a TV is to go into it's settings and disable all of it completely. Also you didn't say what you're using to play the encodes. ie a media player built into the TV, or a Bluray player etc. I've had fairly limited experience using different types of media players but even so it's fairly obvious they're not created equally. Even the image produced when playing the same encode using the two different Bluray players in this house (same TV) looks slightly different. Neither is bad, just one's a little more pleasing to the eye. If you're comparing encodes using a TV then ideally you'd probably want to be playing them on a PC connected to it, as chances are it'll be the best media player you own anyway (assuming you're using a decent software player). The fact you say you can't see these "dirty artifacts" when playing the encodes and viewing them on your PC monitor would seem to indicate you need to find out what's messing with the picture when you're viewing them on the TV. Artifacts don't magically disappear and if they're encoded into the video you should be able to see them using your PC monitor too. Often when people post regarding visual problems playing encodes it's a problem with sending the TV the wrong levels or something similar. |
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2012, divx, tests, x264, xvid |
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