This post may or may not have been spurred by a raw encoder who has been around for years and yet still makes rookie mistakes. (Gigantic caveat: “experience” doesn’t necessarily correlate with having encoded a lot.
![warpsharp 1.2 download warpsharp 1.2 download](https://s20.postimg.cc/mlhhju2d9/Olap8_zpsbrsjy3u5.png)
If you aren’t sure whether you need help, you do. Ask experienced encoders for help if you need it. I absolutely am going to complain if you don’t properly deinterlace sources that should be deinterlaced, or if you completely munge IVTC and end up blending frames, or if you somehow resize frames to the wrong aspect ratio, or if you make other mistakes along those lines.
#Warpsharp 1.2 download series
I’m not going to complain about relatively obscure shit like rainbowing in analogue transfers or rainbow banding in just about any White Fox series those are genuinely difficult to fix and if people choose to leave those alone, fine. You just need to spend time to actually learn it and then care about producing a good result. I’ve always maintained that learning the basics of encoding is not hard. On the other hand, I’m already venting very frequently on Twitter and for the most part I think I’m preaching to the choir.)īUT ANYWAY MY POINT IS: I want to watch properly encoded videos. I guess I’m just venting on a more public platform than my locked Twitter account? (Well, “public” in the literal sense, but clearly my Twitter account has an order of magnitude more visibility despite being locked. This blog has like zero readership these days (did you know that tells you site stats? revolutionary, I know) so I don’t know who exactly I’m trying to reach out to with this post. Guess who just watched a video that was badly encoded?