What do codes mean on torrent downloads






















AVC High L3. Your email address will not be published. July 11, at pm. Dave Taylor says:. July 12, at am. December 29, at am. December 30, at pm. Fabio says:. Also, HDTV will often simply mean that the source file was HD, so while the file you're downloading might be in widescreen format, it won't be at HD resolution. If you see 'HR.

The difference between these two formats may be what's causing the varying file sizes you noted. Pretty much any acronym attached after XviD that you don't immediately recognize as video-related is likely to be the release group that posted the file LOL, CTU, etc.

The two above me pretty much have it all covered. Anything less will generally look like crap. I'm being overly pedantic, because of course there is lots of streamed video that's an awful lot worse than dvd quality Technically HDTV should only refer to something at least twice as good as dvd quality dvd is compressed to 10Mbps, I think the lowest HD format I've heard of is about 20Mbps, ish, someone correct me if I'm wrong.

But I don't really download anything, so I really don't know if you would actually be able to feasibly download something of this quality, or if "HDTV" just refers to something that was hi def a couple of generations back So, kinda what toddshot said. I guess it really depends on perspective as to what good quality is, and most people can't tell the difference once you hit a certain threshold Best answer: "Snob" is correct.

Movies introduce an entirely new batch of codes. I can't understand why people do that, when the gains in size are so minimal. Response by poster: Thanks everyone, these are all really helpful answers hatsix and chrominance get the gold stars! The way the file is encoded and compressed plays an equally big, if not bigger, role in the final video quality. These are the most often used encoding standards. Xvid is a free version of the DivX codex, which allows video files, specifically DVDs, to be ripped and compressed with decent quality and size.

However, their lack of compression leads to a rather huge file size, up to 50 to 60GBs or more. The truth is, the answer to that question is going to depend on your personal circumstances and preferences. How fast is your Internet connection? Are you subject to any data limits? How big is your hard drive s? Or do you use an online downloader and save files to the cloud?

Do you collect files, or do you simply watch them once and delete them? Overall, the best quality files are full or Remux BluRay in p. However, these files are huge, often taking up 30GB to 60GBs for a single movie. On the lower end, you have files that are only around MB to 1GB. In general, many people seem to be happy with files in the 5 to 10GB range.



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