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What is the best practice for DXV
Posted: Wed Aug 29, 2012 19:52
by kmifflin
DXV is probably the main reason I've switched to Resomule as my main software for playback. I love the concept of the GPU doing the work and I always maintain a high fps do matter what I though at it. However I find that converting client files from whatever they give me. Usually mp4 or a mov. The video quality is reduced. I get a shift in the colours, small text becomes unclear, and sometimes a get tearing in the video. This only happens when I convert content. If I create the content say in c4d I get a perfect results.
What is the best way to convert any content to DXV?
Is anyone else experiencing this?
So far I've tried
Compressor
Mpegstream clip
QuickTime pro
At my studio I use Mac's however I use pc's to playback on shows. It would be nice to have a good solution for both.
My dream would be to have resolume import media and take care of the transcoding.
Re: What is the best practice for DXV
Posted: Wed Aug 29, 2012 20:30
by the_psychologist
I do everything in After Effects these days. Even basic editing is fine if you learn the program. Plus, you will add to your value if you master the program. It's crazy powerful for content creation.
Re: What is the best practice for DXV
Posted: Thu Aug 30, 2012 01:30
by kmifflin
Even just converting an mp4 to DXV mov you use ae?
Re: What is the best practice for DXV
Posted: Thu Aug 30, 2012 07:52
by the_psychologist
yes. i have an "edit bay" saved in AE where i do all my clips. they all end up at 720p DXV, varying frame rates. i have not found a better (and more valuable) tool in the last two years of VJing.
Re: What is the best practice for DXV
Posted: Sun Sep 02, 2012 03:50
by kmifflin
So I have to say I surprised that only one member commented on this. Like I said, I find that Converting to DXV seems to cause a lot of artifacts. Either I'm doing something wrong or no one seems to care.
Re: What is the best practice for DXV
Posted: Sun Sep 02, 2012 08:35
by Basic
I never really render actual video but i would use AE to convert everything.
Why don't you post some still images of the footage and we can see what the artifaks are like.
Have you searched the forum to see some other threads?
Re: What is the best practice for DXV
Posted: Sun Sep 02, 2012 10:01
by Basic
having another think too, if you are converting mp4 into dxv you are re compressing, compressed footage (actual video footage) so artifacts will tend to happen.
If I create the content say in c4d I get a perfect results
This will always work fine.
Re: What is the best practice for DXV
Posted: Sun Sep 02, 2012 15:52
by kmifflin
Yes when creating content I generally don't have colour/black issues or tearing. However 90% of my daily work is on corporate events that have their own content developers. In these cases even if I suggest that the files be created with a specific codec they still in all different types. That is why converting them is the only option I have.
I've started looking at AE to convert then files. So far I don't see any tearing problems, however I still a shift in the colour space, and the blacks look grey. And I see an over all noise across the video.
Re: What is the best practice for DXV
Posted: Sun Sep 02, 2012 20:32
by Basic
Yes when creating content I generally don't have colour/black issues or tearing. However 90% of my daily work is on corporate events that have their own content developers. In these cases even if I suggest that the files be created with a specific codec they still in all different types. That is why converting them is the only option I have.
Yeah i know how you feel ive had this before and it's a pain, be more pressing and try and get it the way you like. I would maybes explain the reason and show them samples.
I mean say you shot the footage yourself, captured and then rendered i don't think you would have the issues you are describing but I may be wrong (this is due to me rarely using video footage now a days anyways).
I've started looking at AE to convert then files. So far I don't see any tearing problems, however I still a shift in the colour space, and the blacks look grey. And I see an over all noise across the video.
I think most re-encoding will be the same regardless of workflow i think what you have mentioned above about the content creators. Again I would maybes post some still images if possible so we can see the issues.
I'm sure there are some other similar threads out there which i would look for.
Good luck too and I hope you can get their content creators to see sense

Re: What is the best practice for DXV
Posted: Thu Sep 27, 2012 16:30
by Sadler
Here's a compare from h264 source converted to DXV using Livid Batch Export Utility. They're different certainly but not much and I would say the DXV looks more vibrant. DXV is playing in MPC and H264 is playing in Quicktime Player. Source file courtesy of
http://www.beeple-crap.com/