Comments

Ron Lucas wrote on 1/16/2003, 2:50 PM
I'm wondering the same thing. Hoping that it will have the latest Main Concept encoder which claims to be faster and better.

Ron
bstaley wrote on 1/17/2003, 12:57 PM
Bump.

I have also noticed the Windows Media 9 doesn't have a 2-Pass option.
snicholshms wrote on 1/17/2003, 1:13 PM
What is the two pass option for? I recently tried this option on a WMV (8) thinking it might compress the video with fewer artifacts. But the resultant video was worse than not selecting this option.
RoyS wrote on 1/17/2003, 2:31 PM
I noticed that as well. The release notes for the beat stte that WM9 support is still in progress .. Hopefully it will be in the release.

CraigF wrote on 1/17/2003, 2:45 PM
Does the VV3 MainConcept encoder support 2 Pass VBR? I thought it did, but I'm a VideoFactory user (for now)...

Craig
vonhosen wrote on 1/17/2003, 2:55 PM
No there is no 2 pass VBR MPEG with VV3, only 1 pass.
bstaley wrote on 1/17/2003, 3:01 PM
The new standalone Main Concept encoder supports 2-Pass VBR, but the Main Concept encoder included with VV3 does not.
Ron Lucas wrote on 1/20/2003, 4:11 PM
Sofo, will an updated Main Concept encoder be incluced with Vegas 4?

Thanks,
Ron
mikkie wrote on 1/20/2003, 7:07 PM
For what it's worth...

The dual pass in wm8 was cool if you were going with a relatively high bitrate, or squezzing something realy small. Otherwise it had a tendancy to cut the bitrate so much that sections of the video looked pretty nasty.

The dual pass vbr in wm9's encoder is *GREAT*, though it's one of those you want to consider rendering overnight with - it is slow at full size, not too bad at 1/2 (320 x 240). It has a quality vbr option which is less bit rate sensitive, and a peak vbr that limits how low it'll cut things, and what the maximum (peak) bit rate will be. After a 7 hour render or so, I've gotten just over an hour's worth of full size video at 30fps on a CD, & you'd be really hard pressed to tell it from the digital original. The downside is wm9 vbr takes a heftier cpu to play it back, older machines don't like it.

What's really cool is that wm9 is editable! You can treat it like an avi file -- only the part that changes gets re-rendered/re-compressed! Playing with wm9 captures there seems less quality loss per generation then working with comparible avi files, disk space is almost irrelevant -- just need more then a junior editor like moviemaker 2.

mike