if I select 2 passes, will I have a better result that if I had selected only one? How does this impact file size? what is the number pass good for? quality? E.g. if I am ready to favor file size over picture quality, what would you recommend: lower bitrate? lossy codec? which one? how do I select a rendering profile based on the characteristics of the original video? Assuming I don't want to resize it, nor loose quality, that is. Stream #0.1(und): Audio: aac, 48000 Hz, stereo, s16, 127 kb/sĬlearly neither result is satisfactory, which brings me to my questions: And now the bitrate went from 16000 down to only 5800!! *EDIT: all titles play 16,000 bitrate with everything updated and hdr windows on.Seems stream 0 codec frame rate differs from container frame rate: 120.00 (120/1) -> 59.94 (60000/1001) I found this out when I upgraded from 1080 to 4K. Net income grew 394.05% to 2.8B."The only way to get 4k with netflix is Microsoft Edge and the Windows Netflix app. I hope this is fixed soon and is just a bug, or Else I'm going to very very uphappy! All these companies are loving the covid crap and giving them an excuse to screw over people while RAKING IN TONS OF PROFIT."Netflix Inc reported revenue of 25.0B for FY 2020, an increase of 113.77% compared to FY 2017.
I have done windows updates, updated Edge (only way I can get 4k) AND HERE EVEN THE ACTUAL Netflix app will only give 5800 bitrate on all 4k and 4k HDR titles now. NOW TODAY I just checked the bitrate cause I love 4k content, I put on netflix to a 4k movie then checked bitrate. When I turn WIndows HDR off, all videos even 4k play 5800 bit rate and look bad.
I been watching all 4k titles with my LG UN650 HDR 32 inch monitor for months at 16,000 bitrate.