![]() ![]() And both held up no matter what I threw at them, from animated movies to black-and-white classics to films with lots of fast action and bright colors. In my tests, both H.264 and HEVC looked remarkably close to the original, even on a big TV screen. Older Macs can play HEVC files just fine, but only the newest models have chips fast enough to encode HEVC decently. If you don't have a Mac made from 2017 onward, stick with H.264. H.265 or HEVC makes files even smaller - but requires hefty processing power to crunch the necessary numbers. Tried-and-true H.264 converts relatively quickly, and it can squeeze a high-def Blu-ray file onto a DVD's worth of space or less. The first two aren't worth considering with the latter two available. HandBrake offers a choice of four compression algorithms: MPEG-2 (oldest, relatively lousy), MPEG-4 (still old, not great), H.264 (old, faster, pretty good), and HEVC/H.265 (new, slower, even better). HEVC: Which compression algorithm is best? Lib: 361 flatpak: 0 snap: 3 Shell: Bash v: 5.0.Let's discuss a couple of the choices you'll need to weigh before you start putting your videos through the wringer. System Temperatures: cpu: 44.0 C mobo: 27.8 C Size: 7.28 TiB block size: physical: 4096 B logical: 512 B serial: ID-3: /dev/sdb type: USB vendor: Western Digital model: WD My Book 25EE Rotation: 5400 rpm serial: rev: SDM1 scheme: GPT ID-2: /dev/sda vendor: Seagate model: ST2000LX001-1RG174 size: 1.82 TiBīlock size: physical: 4096 B logical: 512 B speed: 6.0 Gb/s ID-1: /dev/nvme0n1 vendor: Samsung model: SSD 960 PRO 512GB size: 476.94 GiBīlock size: physical: 512 B logical: 512 B speed: 31.6 Gb/s lanes: 4 V: kernel alternate: snd_soc_skl,snd_sof_pci bus ID: 00:1f.3ĭevice-2: AudioQuest USB2.0 Hub type: USBĭriver: hid-generic,snd-usb-audio,usbhid bus ID: 1-4.4:7 chip ID: 21b4:0083ĭevice-1: Intel Cannon Point-LP CNVi driver: iwlwifi v: kernel OpenGL: renderer: Mesa Intel Iris Plus Graphics 655 (CFL GT3)ĭevice-1: Intel Cannon Point-LP High Definition Audio driver: snd_hda_intel Type: tsx_async_abort status: Not affectedĭevice-1: Intel Iris Plus Graphics 655 driver: i915 v: kernelĭisplay: x11 server: XOrg 1.20.9 driver: intel unloaded: modesettingĪlternate: fbdev,vesa display ID: :0 screens: 1 Type: spectre_v2 mitigation: Full generic retpoline, IBPB: conditional, Mitigation: usercopy/swapgs barriers and _user pointer sanitization Mitigation: Speculative Store Bypass disabled via prctl and seccomp Type: mds mitigation: Clear CPU buffers SMT vulnerable Mitigation: PTE Inversion VMX: conditional cache flushes, SMT vulnerable Vulnerabilities: Type: itlb_multihit status: KVM: VMX disabled Info: Quad Core model: Intel Core i7-8559U bits: 64 type: MT MCPĪrch: Kaby Lake family: 6 model-id: 8E (142) stepping: A (10) microcode: D6įlags: avx avx2 lm nx pae sse sse2 sse3 sse4_1 sse4_2 ssse3 vmx Model: Logitech Wireless Mobile Mouse MX Anywhere 2S serial:Ĭharge: 100% (should be ignored) rechargeable: yes status: Discharging Mobo: Intel model: NUC8BEB v: J72688-308 serial: UEFI: Intel Serial: Chassis: Intel Corporation type: 35 v: 2.0 serial: Type: Mini-pc System: Intel Client Systems product: NUC8i7BEH v: J72992-308 Parameters: BOOT_IMAGE=/boot/vmlinuz-5.9-x86_64 I have already tried the obvious uninstall/reinstall of Handbrake with no change in symptoms.Īlso - what’s the deal with getting a “No links” error posting this because it says “XOrg” in my inxi -Fazy output? I am using Handbrake installed from the official repo binary - 1.3.3-4, 5.9 kernel, latest updates installed. Not sure if I need to enable something so those get captured. For whatever reason, I could see no messages related to a panic when I checked journalctl. If I use an option that uses H.264 instead, I it works fine. My attempts to encode a MKV created with MakeMKV (bluray rip) is for some reason causing my computer to crash/shutdown. ![]()
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