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Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 29 7:57 am)



Subject: Poser to mpeg2 codec


gast ( ) posted Wed, 23 April 2003 at 8:07 AM · edited Mon, 18 November 2024 at 8:40 PM

I am in need of a MPEG2 codec for my poser install, to produce mpeg2 movies directly. Does anyone have a link i would be over the moon. Yigi


wolf359 ( ) posted Wed, 23 April 2003 at 8:16 AM

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Ive never seen the MPEG 2 Codec available in anything other than separate incoding programs and DVD authoring tools I use Discteet's Media cleaner for this purpose.



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wolf359 ( ) posted Wed, 23 April 2003 at 8:17 AM

I mean "Discreet" Duh!!



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Tguyus ( ) posted Wed, 23 April 2003 at 8:56 AM

I just finished running some tests comparing a few different DVD editing and authoring programs (and their embedded MPEG encoders) using Poser AVIs and image sequences as inputs. My aim was to find the best quality display of Poser 4 animations on my HDTV digital television after burning the animations into DVD.

Bottom line was I was very disappointed at the quality of the MPEG encoders used by Ulead Movie Factory 2 and Dazzle Complete DVD. I also tried the MPEG output file mode for Pinnacle Studio 7 (to burn directly to DVD you need to upgrade to Studio 8, but I read about major problems with crashing during burning... and I had already bought ENOUGH authoring programs trying to find the right one). But Pinnacle MPEGs were even worse.

As a matter of fact, I was also very disappointed in the quality of the MPEG encoding by these programs of regular digital camcorder footage when burning to DVD. I saw lots of distracting jaggies, especially in outdoor high-contrast action shots. And doing something like a slow pan across a grassy area made the grass look all jaggy and pixelated. Very disappointing since I had just assumed DVD authoring programs would make perfect replicas of my digital camcorder tapes.

Then I found some advice on the DVDplusRW.org forums that suggested using TMPGEnc to encode the MPEG files. In fact, I found four different message threads which suggested TMPGEnc as the best encoder. I tried their trial version last weekend and it works better than anything else I've tried on regular camcorder footage (but still not as perfect as the original tape plays on my HDTV).

TMPGEnc also did a very good job with Poser 4 avi files, though I haven't really tried this out extensively with lots of different tweaking sets yet. And I'm not sure the TMPGEnc results on DVD will be better than some earlier tests burning Poser AVIs to DVD I did using Quicktime to convert the 640-x480 AVI output from Poser to a DVD-compliant 720x480 stream (Ulead, but not Dazzle, can import Quicktime MOV files and you can tell Ulead Movie Factory 2 not to re-encode DVD compliant streams, so you avoid their MPEG encoder that way... though I think Dazzle will also skip it's own encoding if the input is DVD-compliant). I remember from my testing that this gave good results, but I need to look back over those tests to be sure (I'm not very rigorously organized when I do these tests... not a scientist type... and I forget stuff too quickly these days)

So my advice would be to try the free version of TMPGEnc at TMPGEnc.net. This trial version lets you encode MPEG-2 files for 11 days or so before requiring an upgrade to TMPGEnc-Plus. I've been convinced enough of the quality improvement using TMPGEnc for my digital camcorder DVD authoring that I plan to get the upgrade, which I think is about $45 for a download version.

Let us know what you think, and if you find any other good programs or strategies.

Good luck...


BeatYourSoul ( ) posted Wed, 23 April 2003 at 9:41 AM

TMPGEnc is considered one of the best MPEG encoders, especially for the cost. One thing that you have to remember is that "DVD-compliant" still means MPEG. If you're writing to a DVD to be played as a DVD video, it's MPEG. MPEG is, by definition, lossy compression of the video stream. You'll never get results that look as good as a lossless digital input and will loose even more on a quality analog input. Look closely at even your best commercial DVDs and you'll notice artifacts on fast changing video. Some of this can be 'smoothed out' by a good MPEG decoder w/filtering and correction (i.e.: a good DVD-player). This is where VBR (Variable Bit Rate) comes into play. VBR will compress the stream more for low-variant sections while compressing less for high-variant sections (lots of motion or changes). The only way to achieve quality DVD-quality MPEG is to use VBR. That'll be 2 cents, please. BYS


EsnRedshirt ( ) posted Wed, 23 April 2003 at 2:54 PM

Personally, I prefer DivX; a) it's free, b) it's got a great compression rate, c) it's free. Sadly, it isn't compatable with normal DVD players (yet), but oh well, you can't have everything.


Little_Dragon ( ) posted Wed, 23 April 2003 at 8:58 PM

I use TMPGEnc to convert my Poser videos to MPEG-1 format. I can vouch for its effectiveness.



Bongo ( ) posted Wed, 23 April 2003 at 9:24 PM

I use Tmpgenc to convert Poser to 720x480 "super vcd" to make cd's to play full-screen, full speed on DVD player. Works great.


lmckenzie ( ) posted Thu, 24 April 2003 at 12:04 AM

I use it all the time to convert downloaded mpegs to vcd format which I can play using my DVD ROMs player out to (ancient) VHS. I think I read that the first DVD players that handle Divx are now on the market or soon will be.

"Democracy is a pathetic belief in the collective wisdom of individual ignorance." - H. L. Mencken


Little_Dragon ( ) posted Thu, 24 April 2003 at 3:08 AM

Yes, they're already available. The first on the market was the KiSS DP-450.

On a related note, a new version of DivX (v5.0.4) was officially released last week.



Tguyus ( ) posted Thu, 24 April 2003 at 8:03 AM

Looks like I'll have to try DivX again, at least for encoding AVIs for playback on the computer. When I tried it a couple months ago (v 5.0.2 I think) I didn't really like the image quality. I thought it wasn't as good as using Quicktime Pro 6 to play back an imported AVI or image sequence from Poser. Also, the DivX player included in the bundle kept crashing at the end of every clip. But I should try it again now that v5.0.4 is out (thanks for the tip Little Dragon).

Thanks to BYS for the insights on what actually constitutes a DVD-compliant stream. I had just been going by the Ulead or DVD Complete setup screens reporting whether the imported clip was being interpreted by the program as DVD-compliant or not. But maybe Ulead just interprets a 720x480 Quicktime MOV file as an MPEG.


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