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Also anyone use AVID DNxHD as in intermediate? It's also free but it's also huge files sizes. I saw a tutorial that uses it so they can use Handbrake for the final render (not my video --->) http://youtu.be/rWMX5lSvEgY
Supposedly it gives the best quality? If anyone watches the video I would love to hear your thoughts on it.
You can get Cineform for free now (up to 1080P encoding) since GoPro bought the company so price is not an issue anymore however Vegas has terrible support for Cineform in the current version 10 so it doesn't really matter how good Cineform is, with Vegas it's broken & frustrating to use hopefully there will be a fix in 11.
You can get Cineform for free now (up to 1080P encoding) since GoPro bought the company so price is not an issue anymore however Vegas has terrible support for Cineform in the current version 10 so it doesn't really matter how good Cineform is, with Vegas it's broken & frustrating to use hopefully there will be a fix in 11.
You can download it here GoPro CineForm Studio, it's on the GoPro site and not the Cineform site yet, it's pretty much NeoScene for free with a few added benefits. So far the take over has been pretty good with prices dropping like crazy, codec packages that was $999 was lowered to $299, will help to make Cineform more mainstream in the long run I guess.
GoPro Cineform Studio takes footage captured with the 3D HERO System and converts it into viewable 3D files.
All what you need is encoder being open (so some CF software with license ), than you can use 100s of tools to convert your source files to CF- just note only few will keep 10bit precision (if source is 10bit). Decoding is free.
DNxHD, ProRes are good for broadcast (with their current bitrate limitations), but they are not as good as CF, which is also targeted at high-end workflows. CF is now everywhere- from Premiere, FCP to Resolve, Mistika, Baselight, etc. It offers better quality as bitrate is not restricted and it's real VBR based- besides it does 12bit 4:4:4. DNxHD 444 is same as old version- just enabled 4:4:4 smapling, so bitrate is doubled, but still 5:1 compression at best. DNxHD introduces macroblocking on difficult, noisy sources- not really good for high-end workflows- just for broadcast.
Look here:
http://www.grassvalley.com/docs/WhitePapers/professional/GV-4097M_HQX_Whitepaper.pdf
Both DNxHD and ProRes are restricted in terms of bitrate and not really VBR based (ProRes goes only 10% above target bitrate), so with more difficult sources they are not as good as HQX or CF. Some scenes may look way worse than rest of them- this is a bit of problem. Apple white paper shows it- they use STEM testing footage- at about 700 frames (and also near to end) there are difficult scenes with lots of details- ProRes/DNxHD falls down to 46dB PSNR, where CF keeps it at above 55dB as for other scenes. This is due to open, real VBR nature of CF.
It's Apple's, AVID's decision to stop at about 5:1 compression ratio, where HQX, CF can go even to 2:1 (near lossless compression) and support 8K resolution or even above. They are all about the same efficiency, just with different restrictions.
If you don't need 10bit use free UtVideo codec (now on PC and MAC)- lossless 4:2:0, 4:2:2 or RGB modes, with speed way above all intermediate codecs- fastest codec on EarthBig file size?- disk are cheap these days- don't see it as a big problem.