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<blockquote data-quote="GDusty" data-source="post: 359428" data-attributes="member: 56968"><p>re: AIStudios comments - </p><p></p><p>sorry if this sounds too pedantic, and is getting slightly off-topic, but "mkv" is not an indicator of quality. It is just a container. It is the quality of the video stream that you put <em>inside </em>the mkv container that counts.</p><p></p><p>If you really wanted to, you could put the original dvd (mpeg2) files inside an mkv file and you would have identical quality (and filesize) to the original.</p><p></p><p>Or, you can re-encode the mpeg2 to a different codec (such as h264 or mpeg4), usually giving you a smaller filesize, and put this inside the mkv. But you could just as easily put your encode into an avi, or mp4 file. The video quality will be the same, independent of the container.</p><p></p><p>The determining factor for quality is the codec you use and the settings (especially bitrate) that you used for that particular encode.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GDusty, post: 359428, member: 56968"] re: AIStudios comments - sorry if this sounds too pedantic, and is getting slightly off-topic, but "mkv" is not an indicator of quality. It is just a container. It is the quality of the video stream that you put [I]inside [/I]the mkv container that counts. If you really wanted to, you could put the original dvd (mpeg2) files inside an mkv file and you would have identical quality (and filesize) to the original. Or, you can re-encode the mpeg2 to a different codec (such as h264 or mpeg4), usually giving you a smaller filesize, and put this inside the mkv. But you could just as easily put your encode into an avi, or mp4 file. The video quality will be the same, independent of the container. The determining factor for quality is the codec you use and the settings (especially bitrate) that you used for that particular encode. [/QUOTE]
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