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DL: Lady Gaga - Marry The Night + speech(Bambi 2011 - HD FEED - 1080i)


chizzum
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I only wish this had 5.1 audio, but thank you for the phenomenal quality! :D

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I managed to capture the feed from yesterday, this one is MPEG2 4:2:2 profile so you need either a compatible codec like Elecard or play it with VLC.

Lady Gaga - Marry The Night (Bambi Awards 2011 - 1080i - mp2 - 20111110)-MelC4Eva

As always if you want to reuse this file keep the filename intact.

Can i ask you why these videos you're posting are so big in size? Is there any way to reduce the size without losing the quality?

And they doesn't seam to work with the program that i'm using for cutting the videos, can you recomand me some programs that will work with these kinda videos? I want only the performance without the speech :)

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Because they are the master feed from the venue being transmitted to the broadcaster hence the bitrate on them is much higher then it is on normal channels. I'm not into reencoding so i'm not the guy to ask but i would assume a decent H264 reencode would do the job well for you without loosing too much.

I use http://www.videoredo.com/en/index.htm to cut most of my caps, it's been working pretty well for me so far.

hmpf this forum url linking is horrible :neutral:

Edited by chizzum
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I'm using videoredo myself, but it don't work with the files you posted. It opens file without problem but when i try to cut out some scene it starts and finishes cutting about 5 seconds, this doesn't heppen with other files i tried. Maybe i should change the parameters of the program when working with these files, but i don't understand much there... You said it works well for you, did you changed any program parameters or did anything else after instalation?

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BornToSlay

I don't know how much you guys know about bit rates, but here is my take on it. Since they aren't bandwidth limited (like internet streams), the bit rates for the digital TV broadcasts are always ridiculously high. They obviously want the best quality possible, but it's kind of overkill. I think most HD feeds are around 20-30 Mbit/s. To put that into persective, 30Mbit/s = 3.75 MB/s so a 5-6 minute video ends up being well over 1GB in size. 1080p Youtube videos can range anywhere from 3-6 Mbit/s based on what I've see so their bit rates are much lower. In general, when downconverting videos with high bit rates (like HD DSLR camera footage or TV broadcast feeds), I tend to go for around 8 Mbit/s, I can get a video that's less than half the size with no noticeable loss in quality. Obviously this varies a lot from video to video so it does not apply to everything.

I really dislike YouTube rips because of their bit rates, they're optimized for fast streaming than quality. 3Mbit/s is frequently not good enough for 1080p if you want really high quality.

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I'm using videoredo myself, but it don't work with the files you posted. It opens file without problem but when i try to cut out some scene it starts and finishes cutting about 5 seconds, this doesn't heppen with other files i tried. Maybe i should change the parameters of the program when working with these files, but i don't understand much there... You said it works well for you, did you changed any program parameters or did anything else after instalation?

u have the latest version of TV suite with h264?

go to options > transport stream output > output mux rate (select automatic, if that does not work set a number higher then the bitrate of the file .. like 40 or something and try again .. some feeds are 40+ so ud have to increase it if so)

that usually does the trick.

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I don't know how much you guys know about bit rates, but here is my take on it. Since they aren't bandwidth limited (like internet streams), the bit rates for the digital TV broadcasts are always ridiculously high. They obviously want the best quality possible, but it's kind of overkill. I think most HD feeds are around 20-30 Mbit/s. To put that into persective, 30Mbit/s = 3.75 MB/s so a 5-6 minute video ends up being well over 1GB in size. 1080p Youtube videos can range anywhere from 3-6 Mbit/s based on what I've see so their bit rates are much lower. In general, when downconverting videos with high bit rates (like HD DSLR camera footage or TV broadcast feeds), I tend to go for around 8 Mbit/s, I can get a video that's less than half the size with no noticeable loss in quality. Obviously this varies a lot from video to video so it does not apply to everything.

I really dislike YouTube rips because of their bit rates, they're optimized for fast streaming than quality. 3Mbit/s is frequently not good enough for 1080p if you want really high quality.

Talking about "the digital TV broadcasts" as the channel itself or the feed? TV channels in general be it satellite, cable or OTA are way bitrate starved. There are very few HD channels that actually look good. They try to save as much bandwidth as possible to save on broadcasting costs ... and the sad part is that most people doesn't see the difference so they get away with subpar quality. Comparing some feeds to the channel broadcasts does make u wanna cry seeing when you know how it could have looked like if they had only spent a bit more on their bandwidth. :)

Regarding feeds it is not as common as ud might think with these 30-40mbit HD feeds ... in general it's lower ... (obviously a h264 feed does not require 40mbit to look excellent, i've seen 20mbit feeds that looks really good)

The broadcasters are not limited per say but renting satellite frequencies aint cheap so they cut down on the bitrate here aswell.

You also have to consider that a live event is encoded on the fly and hence requires higher bitrate then a reencode where you have no time limits.

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u have the latest version of TV suite with h264?

go to options > transport stream output > output mux rate (select automatic, if that does not work set a number higher then the bitrate of the file .. like 40 or something and try again .. some feeds are 40+ so ud have to increase it if so)

that usually does the trick.

Yes it says h264

My options menu is different, there is no 'transport stream output' function, closest thing i found is 'stream parameters'

Here's how it looks like:

2qnv0bk.jpg

I don't see any 'output mux rate' what do i have to do here to make it work properly, i don't understand nothing here :(

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