Official "This part of the guide SUCKS!" thread, 2
- Zarxrax
- Joined: Sun Apr 01, 2001 6:37 pm
- Contact:
How would people feel about completely removing the stuff about "bait-and-switch" editing? I'm going to be reorganizing some stuff, and killing that would let me make things cleaner and more organized.
Does anyone actually use this method for editing?
I personally don't like it for a number of reasons, one being that its quite dangerous and finicky.
In addition, the other methods are better than ever these days. With a codec like Lagarith, it only take around 4gb of space to store an entire anime episode losslessly. Trim off the opening and endings and you might be looking at something more like 3-3.5gb per episode.
Editing from AVS files is faster than every with some new techniques I'm including in the guide. It will be nearly twice as fast as the old method.
Is there really still a place for that old bait and switch method?
Does anyone actually use this method for editing?
I personally don't like it for a number of reasons, one being that its quite dangerous and finicky.
In addition, the other methods are better than ever these days. With a codec like Lagarith, it only take around 4gb of space to store an entire anime episode losslessly. Trim off the opening and endings and you might be looking at something more like 3-3.5gb per episode.
Editing from AVS files is faster than every with some new techniques I'm including in the guide. It will be nearly twice as fast as the old method.
Is there really still a place for that old bait and switch method?
- Fall_Child42
- has a rock
- Joined: Wed Aug 11, 2004 6:32 pm
- Status: Veloci-tossin' to the max!
- Location: Jurassic Park
- Scintilla
- (for EXTREME)
- Joined: Mon Mar 31, 2003 8:47 pm
- Status: Quo
- Location: New Jersey
- Contact:
- x_rex30
- Joined: Tue Apr 10, 2001 4:30 pm
If using a basic AVS script with just using basic settings like deinterlacing methods and fps adjustments.. then when ready to export the video... change the script to premade ones with settings that really clean up the footage.. is considered "bait-and-switch", then I'd say no, don't get rid of it. I remake fake avis with Vfapi when I'm about ready to make the video for distrobution by swapping the basic setting AVS script for editing to a more advance script that is not so good for editing. So if this is what is considered "bait-and-switch" then please don't get rid of it for it is very helpful IMO if you know what you're doing.Zarxrax wrote:How would people feel about completely removing the stuff about "bait-and-switch" editing? I'm going to be reorganizing some stuff, and killing that would let me make things cleaner and more organized.
Does anyone actually use this method for editing?
- Zarxrax
- Joined: Sun Apr 01, 2001 6:37 pm
- Contact:
- Willen
- Now in Hi-Def!
- Joined: Sun Jul 10, 2005 1:50 am
- Status: Melancholy
- Location: SOS-Dan HQ
Since this came up here:
http://www.animemusicvideos.org/phpBB/v ... hp?t=65156
I think that a few more pictures in the Aspect Ratio section would greatly help. Since anime doesn't try (sometimes on purpose) to keep shapes of objects correct most of the time, it is hard for people to realize that some of the footage they are watching is in the wrong aspect ratio. The Utena images on the EADFAG section that deals with Anamorphic Widescreen is somewhat useful for dealing with those situations, but lately I've seem more AMVs with 4:3 footage released in DivX/XviD .avi that are 720 x 480 so they have no AR flags and don't display properly. I think that having images to reference would greatly improve understanding of ARs and why DVD footage needs to be resized for distro formats.
http://www.animemusicvideos.org/phpBB/v ... hp?t=65156
I think that a few more pictures in the Aspect Ratio section would greatly help. Since anime doesn't try (sometimes on purpose) to keep shapes of objects correct most of the time, it is hard for people to realize that some of the footage they are watching is in the wrong aspect ratio. The Utena images on the EADFAG section that deals with Anamorphic Widescreen is somewhat useful for dealing with those situations, but lately I've seem more AMVs with 4:3 footage released in DivX/XviD .avi that are 720 x 480 so they have no AR flags and don't display properly. I think that having images to reference would greatly improve understanding of ARs and why DVD footage needs to be resized for distro formats.
- Orwell
- godx, Son of godix
- Joined: Tue Jan 06, 2004 5:14 am
- Location: Frying Pan. Destination: Fire.
I'd like to see scintilla's guide for encoding to mpeg for cons either in the links section, or in the guide itself. I found it very useful after trying to get TMPEGEnc to encode in 29.97 properly.
More information on various filters available in avisynth, possibly another place for some of the information from AMVWiki.
The only other thing I really found lacking in the guides was clear simple navigation when I first used it, and there was never a way to return to the homepage.
More information on various filters available in avisynth, possibly another place for some of the information from AMVWiki.
The only other thing I really found lacking in the guides was clear simple navigation when I first used it, and there was never a way to return to the homepage.
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[Kristyrat]: Vote for Orwell
[Kristyrat]: because train conducters are dicks.
Otohiko: whereas Germans are like "god we are all so horrible, we're going to die a pointless death now."
[Kristyrat]: Vote for Orwell
[Kristyrat]: because train conducters are dicks.
Otohiko: whereas Germans are like "god we are all so horrible, we're going to die a pointless death now."
- Zarxrax
- Joined: Sun Apr 01, 2001 6:37 pm
- Contact:
- JCD
- Lord of the Dance
- Joined: Mon Jan 21, 2002 3:42 pm
- Contact:
True, but however, I myself found CLI encoding very complicated and really time-consuming so I'd love to see a small extension of how to use meGUI as that will be way easier to explain for people new to this. Especially now since it also supports audio encoding, I don't see anything wrong with it.Zarxrax wrote:Zero1 has been writing a great guide on it, so I will probably use that. I'm not sure if I will put it directly in the guide though, or make it an off-site link.
Gotta get more people into h264 :D





