I still think it's odd how some people seem to be so Anti-SVCD where it's often better than at least 1/2 the AVIs out there
Preeminant words "I" and "think"
MPEG4 is a superior codec, MPEG2 is an older poorer codec. These are the formats of Xvid/Divx and DVD/SVCD respectively, on top of the MPEG2, you have the restrictions of the format
Take SVCD...Res is too small, bits wasted on boarders as well (so you have smaller image and addition of huge boarders = no extra gain), you need 2cds more often than not to come to the quality of a 1cd mpeg4 (except when you have those stupid 800-pass things, which are nearly on par with), audio is crap/lacks options, and worst of all you can't reshare... the only think it had going for it was standalone compatability which is fastly becoming a non-issue due to standalones and consoles. If you want a whitesheet of the many reasons why SVCDs aren't very popular here, you want to look on forum.dead-donkey.com in the help section. The simple reason is that, p2p sharability and quality wise, MPEG4 wins
They aren't nearly as hq (the reason why mpeg4 may seem lower is because there's a damn sight more (as they are of course an easier format), so more people mess up
), but they go in SVCD regardless if they were, since they are MPEG2 rather than MPEG4.
Of course format conversion shouldn't really be done, quality loss is too much... however, MPEG2 -> MPEG4 is the only way your going to get a decent result. Its a more compressable source since MPEG2 isn't as nearly as optimised due to it being an older format.
http://forum.dead-donkey.com/viewtopic. ... light=svcd
http://forum.dead-donkey.com/viewtopic. ... light=svcd
If you can ignore the crap and want to read more on format quality and feasability of release. It was in response to what format releases should be in.
xVCD is a format for people that don't have the capabilities for MPEG4 playback. Quality and sound superiority is in favour of mpeg4. Of course DVDr/9r has the sheer filesize power, but you can get a better quality mpeg4 than DVD9 if the filesize was a level playing field