text/microsoft-resx 2.0 System.Resources.ResXResourceReader, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089 System.Resources.ResXResourceWriter, System.Windows.Forms, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089 x264 has a variety of algorithms to decide when to use B-frames and how many to use. Fast mode takes roughly the same amount of time no matter how many B-frames you specify. However, while fast, its decisions are often suboptimal. Optimal mode gets slower as the maximum number of B-Frames increases, but makes much more accurate decisions, especially when used with B-pyramid. H.264 allows for two different prediction modes, spatial and temporal, in B-frames. Spatial, the default, is almost always better, but temporal is sometimes useful too. x264 can, at the cost of a small amount of speed (and accordingly for a small compression gain), adaptively select which is better for each particular frame. Adaptive quantization controls how the encoder distributes bits across the frame. Higher values take more bits away from edges and complex areas to improve areas with finer detail. Mode decision picks from a variety of options to make its decision: this option chooses what options those are. Fewer partitions to check means faster encoding, at the cost of worse decisions, since the best option might have been one that was turned off. Sane values are ~2-5. This specifies the maximum number of sequential B-frames that the encoder can use. Large numbers generally won't help significantly unless Adaptive B-frames is set to Optimal. Cel-animated source material and B-pyramid also significantly increase the usefulness of larger values. Baseline profile, as required for iPods and similar devices, requires B-frames to be set to 0 (off). After the encoder has done its work, it has a bunch of data that needs to be compressed losslessly, similar to ZIP or RAR. H.264 provides two options for this: CAVLC and CABAC. CABAC decodes a lot slower but compresses significantly better (10-30%), especially at lower bitrates. If you're looking to minimize CPU requirements for video playback, disable this option. Baseline profile, as required for iPods and similar devices, requires CABAC to be disabled. H.264 has a built-in deblocking filter that smooths out blocking artifacts after decoding each frame. This not only improves visual quality, but also helps compression significantly. The deblocking filter takes a lot of CPU power, so if you're looking to minimize CPU requirements for video playback, disable it. The deblocking filter has two adjustable parameters, "strength" and "threshold". The former controls how strong (or weak) the deblocker is, while the latter controls how many (or few) edges it applies to. Lower values mean less deblocking, higher values mean more deblocking. The default is 0 (normal strength) for both parameters. The 8x8 transform is the single most useful feature of x264 in terms of compression-per-speed. It improves compression by at least 5% at a very small speed cost and may provide an unusually high visual quality benefit compared to its compression gain. However, it requires High Profile, which many devices may not support. Controls the motion estimation method. Motion estimation is how the encoder estimates how each block of pixels in a frame has moved. A better motion search method improves compression at the cost of speed. Diamond: performs an extremely fast and simple search using a diamond pattern. Hexagon: performs a somewhat more effective but slightly slower search using a hexagon pattern. Uneven Multi-Hex: performs a very wide search using a variety of patterns, more accurately capturing complex motion. Exhaustive: performs a "dumb" search of every pixel in a wide area. Significantly slower for only a small compression gain. Transformed Exhaustive: Like exhaustive, but makes even more accurate decisions. Accordingly, somewhat slower, also for only a small improvement. This is the distance x264 searches from its best guess at the motion of a block in order to try to find its actual motion. The default is fine for most content, but extremely high motion video, especially at HD resolutions, may benefit from higher ranges, albeit at a high speed cost. x264 normally zeroes out nearly-empty data blocks to save bits to be better used for some other purpose in the video. However, this can sometimes have slight negative effects on retention of subtle grain and dither. Don't touch this unless you're having banding issues or other such cases where you are having trouble keeping fine noise. Psychovisual Rate Distortion means x264 tries to retain detail, for better quality to the human eye, as opposed to trying to maximize quality the way a computer understands it, through signal-to-noise ratios that have trouble telling apart fine detail and noise. Psychovisual Trellis tries to retain more sharpness and detail, but can cause artifacting. It is considered experimental, which is why it's off by default. Good values are 0.1 to 0.2. B-pyramid improves compression by creating a pyramidal structure (hence the name) of B-frames, allowing B-frames to reference each other to improve compression. Requires Max B-frames greater than 1; optimal adaptive B-frames is strongly recommended for full compression benefit. Sane values are ~1-6. The more you add, the better the compression, but the slower the encode. Cel animation tends to benefit from more reference frames a lot more than film content. Note that many hardware devices have limitations on the number of supported reference frames, so if you're encoding for a handheld or standalone player, don't touch this unless you're absolutely sure you know what you're doing! This setting controls both subpixel-precision motion estimation and mode decision methods. Subpixel motion estimation is used for refining motion estimates beyond mere pixel accuracy, improving compression. Mode decision is the method used to choose how to encode each block of the frame: a very important decision. SAD is the fastest method, followed by SATD, RD, RD refinement, and the slowest, QPRD. 6 or higher is strongly recommended: Psy-RD, a very powerful psy optimization that helps retain detail, requires RD. 10, the most powerful and slowest option, requires trellis=2. Trellis fine-tunes the rounding of transform coefficients to squeeze out 3-5% more compression at the cost of some speed. "Always" uses trellis not only during the main encoding process, but also during analysis, which improves compression even more, albeit at great speed cost. Trellis costs more speed at higher bitrates. Performs extra analysis to decide upon weighting parameters for each frame. This improves overall compression slightly and improves the quality of fades greatly. Baseline profile, as required for iPods and similar devices, requires weighted P-frame prediction to be disabled. Note that some devices and players, even those that support Main Profile, may have problems with Weighted P-frame prediction: the Apple TV is completely incompatible with it, for example. The full list of encoder parameters: {0} Reduce decoder CPU usage. Set this if your device is struggling to play the output. (i.e. dropped frames) Sets and ensures compliance with the specified H.264 Levels. This will override all other settings. Adjusts settings to trade off compression efficiency against encoding speed. This establishes your default settings. Tunes, profiles, levels and advanced options string will be applied to this. You should generally set this option to the slowest you can bear since slower settings will result in better quality or smaller files. Limit the profile of the output stream. This will override all other settings. Tune settings to optimise for common scenarios This can improve efficiency for particular source characteristics or set of characteristics of the output file. Changes will be applied after the preset but before all other parameters. Set the desired quality factor. The encoder targets a certain quality. The scale used by each video encoder is different. x264's scale is logarithmic and lower values correspond to higher quality. So small changes in value will result in progressively larger increases or decreases in the resulting file size. A value of 0 means lossless and will result in a file size that is larger than the original source, unless the source was also lossless. Suggested values are: 18 to 20 for standard definition sources and 20 to 23 for high definition sources. x265 is a new encoder, so there are no recommended values yet. You'll have to experiment. FFMpeg's and Theora's scale is more linear. These encoders do not have a lossless mode. Warning: RF 0 is Lossless! A value of 0 means lossless and will result in a file size that is larger than the original source, unless the source was also lossless. x264 and x265's scale is logarithmic and lower values correspond to higher quality. So small increases in value will result in progressively larger increases in the resulting file size. You can optionally store a picture settings with this preset. There are 3 modes: None: Picture settings are not stored in the preset. When loading a source, they will remain as-is within the bounds of the source resolution. This also affects Anamorphic, modulus, cropping etc. Custom: You can optionally set a Maximum width and Height. When doing this an encode will be less than or equal to these values. Keep Aspect Ratio will be automatically turned on. Source Maximum: Always encode at the sources resolution where possible. The options passed to the x264 encoder. The above controls are only a subset of useful x264 parameters. This box allows you to add or modify additional or current parameters as desired. Copyright (C) 2003-2015 The HandBrake Team This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. The x264 Preset / Tune / Profile and Level options are currently in use on the Video Tab. To enable this tab, check the "Use Advanced Tab instead" option on the Video Tab. If you do not use this tab, it can be hidden from: Tools Menu > Options > Advanced. WARNING: You do not have automatic file naming turned on. Please enable this in options. WARNING: You do not currently have automatic audio and subtitle track selection setup. You can setup the default track selection behaviour in options. The Built-in presets have been reset. Reset Complete Higher Quality | | Lower Quality Placebo Quality | WARNING: This feature is experimental and has known issues. Suitable for testing only! Accelerates H.264, MPEG-4, VC1 and WMV3 only and can provide a small improvement on low end hardware. QuickSync hardware not detected! In order to use the QuickSync encoder, you must: - Have a Intel CPU with HD Graphics and QuickSync support. 4th Generation Haswell or newer parts are recommended for best quality. - Have the HD Graphics enabled. - On older versions of windows before 8.x, a monitor connected to the HD Graphics or GPU Virtualisation software installed is also required. WARNING: OpenCL scaling is still in beta. It is only available for modern graphics cards that support OpenCL 1.1 or later. It will fallback to Lanczos software scaling when it is not available for use. Performance gain up to 5%. Minor decrease in quality in some cases. Error Warning: It is not currently possible to use this feature if you require specific subtitle or audio tracks that the automatic selection feature (see options) doesn't support! Tracks are reset with every new source / title selected. You must first scan a source and setup your job before adding to the queue. You must turn on automatic file naming AND set a default path in preferences before you can add to the queue. Warning Are you sure? HandBrake HandBrake is already encoding. Please choose a destination for the file. The current file already exists, do you wish to overwrite it? There are jobs on the queue with the same destination path. Please choose a different path for this job. Pending Jobs {5} New Default Preset Set: {0} A New Update is Available. Goto Tools Menu > Options to Install No Preset selected. You can not modify built in presets. Please select one of your own presets. Please select a folder. Preparing to encode ... You can not import a preset with the same name as a built-in preset. This preset appears to already exist. Would you like to overwrite it? Presets Are you sure you wish to update the selected preset? The Preset has now been updated with your current settings. HandBrake has determined your built-in presets are out of date... These presets will now be updated. Your custom presets have not been updated so you may have to re-create these by deleting and re-adding them. The previous user_presets.xml file was backed up. Queue Finished Scan Cancelled. Scan Completed Scan failed: Scan Failed... Please See Activity Log for details. Scanning source, please wait... Scanning Title {0} of {1} ({2}%) You must first scan a source and setup your job before starting an encode. Please select a preset. Please select a preset to update. Select 'Source' to continue {0} Encodes Pending Notice Overwrite? Question Ready Updated Preset Version The preset you are trying to import is from a different version of HandBrake. It may not be possible to import all the values from this preset. Do you wish to proceed? Unable to import preset! Unable to import the preset as it appears to be corrupted or from an older version of HandBrake. You must first set the destination path for the output file before adding to the queue. The entered destination contained illegal characters. You must fix the path and filename before continuing. Preview Preview (Scaled) Output: {0} The format of the output file. In addition to any supported file system character, you can use the following placeholders that will be replaced when you change title or scan a source. Live Update Options: {source} {title} {chapters} Non-Live Options: {date} {time} {quality} {bitrate} (These only change if you scan a new source, change title or chapters) Available additional Options: {source_path} or {source_folder_name} Not both at the same time! You cannot encode to a file with the same path and name as the source file. Please update the destination filename so that it does not match the source file. Your system prevented HandBrake from launching a web browser. You can still access the help pages by visiting the website directly at: https://handbrake.fr Unable to import the selected preset. The preset may be corrupted or from an older version of HandBrake which is not supported. Presets from older versions must be re-created in the current version. There is no options pane available for this encoder. Please use the 'Extra Options' box on the 'Video' tab to input any additional encoder parameters you may need. Additional advanced arguments that can be passed to the video encoder. You cannot overwrite the source file you want to convert. Please choose a different filename. None - Only tracks where the container does not support the format will be burned in. Foreign Audio Track - The Foreign Audio track will be burned in if available. First Track - The first track will be burned in. Foreign Audio Preferred, else First - If the foreign audio track exists, it will be burned in, otherwise the first track will be chosen. No valid source or titles found. HandBrake will not be able to encode the seleteced source as it did not find a valid source with titles to encode. This could be due to one of the following reasons: - The source file is not a valid video file or is in a format that HandBrake does not support. - The source may be copy protected or include DRM. Please note that HandBrake is not a ripper. The Activity log may have further information.