Who's got MKVs?
#1
For me, nothing beats a well encoded and compressed MKV. Especially cause of data costs in my country. I'm always looking for the smallest possible file-size with as little sacrifice to quality as possible.

Currently, I've found two users/groups that specialize in MKVs - MKVTV and my favourite - MVTUBE.


Can you guys recommend sites or users that specialize in MKVs. And what file format do you prefer and recommend?
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#2
(Aug 18, 2017, 18:01 pm)Nine Wrote: For me, nothing beats a well encoded and compressed MKV. Especially cause of data costs in my country. I'm always looking for the smallest possible file-size with as little sacrifice to quality as possible.

Don't take this personally, the misconception you are laboring under is common, and this post is for your education (and for that of others reading this thread).

Imagine a cardboard box filled with diamonds and a silver box filled with sand. The lids of the boxes are closed but they are not locked.

A rube, when offered the choice, chooses the silver box, without looking inside, because "silver is worth more than cardboard".

That rube is you.

MKV is a container format. That a file is MKV tells you absolutely nothing about the audio and video content it contains. It tells you nothing about the quality. It tells you nothing about the compression.

The audio and video content can be copied, without any loss of quality or change of compression, from an MKV to an MP4 (or a number of other containers) or vice versa in seconds. There is a tutorial in our tutorial section that shows you how--once you understand that a whole new world of content will be available to you.

The source used to create the encoding is genuinely important--you can't make a silk purse out of a sow's ear.

The codec, the resolution, and the bitrate are important. Combined, they dictate the file size. x265 (aka HEVC) is the most space-efficient codec currently in general use; but it is not playable on all hardware.

The container, e.g. MKV is insignificant as you can quickly and easily change that yourself without affecting the quality or compression any time you want.
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#3
" from an MKV to an MP4 "

Yes, by changing the file extension.

"The source used to create the encoding is genuinely important" ?

I just noticed that pirates who are prone to use VP9/8 or High Efficiency Video Coding tend to use MKV as a niche for whatever reason. They're more reliable with

MKVTube sources their material from good webrips and downloads. MKTV isn't always forthcoming with where they get theirs. Looks like web rips as well.

Thanks Sid. But have you got any links to any Users/groups who specialize in MKVs. Just for the novelty. Wink
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#4
(Aug 19, 2017, 00:29 am)Nine Wrote: Yes, by changing the file extension.

O...K...not sure if you're trolling or just genuinely stupid...either way, it is obviously a waste of time trying to help you and I won't bother again.

Still, some people reading this thread might learn something.
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