1000 1-pass CBR encodes to your specified bitrate.\n1-pass quality and quantizer encodes every frame at the same quality.\n2-pass 1st pass gathers statistics for the 2nd pass.\n2-pass internal scales the 2nd pass to your desired file size.\n2-pass external relies on GKnot to scale the .stats file. 1009 Higher settings give higher-quality results, at the cost of slower encoding. 5 (default) should suffice for most jobs. 1010 H.263 smooths the image whereas MPEG (slightly slower) sharpens.\nModulated varies between the two.\nCustom lets you define your own matrix via the Quantization tab. 1011 Choose what you would like the avi to identify itself as 1012 Maximum number of frames allowed between I-frames 1013 Turns on Lumi masking - applies more compression to dark/light areas that the eye can't notice easily 1014 Minimum quantizer allowed for I-frames. Only functional in 2-pass second pass. 1015 Maximum quantizer allowed for I-frames. Only functional in 2-pass second pass. 1016 Minimum quantizer allowed for P-frames. 1017 Maximum quantizer allowed for P-frames. 1020 Define your own MPEG quantization matrices. Quantization type must be set to "Custom" to affect encoding. 1021 A value of 20 will give 20% more bits to every I-frame 1022 Minimum space between I-frames - should be less than 10, set to 1 to disable forced I-frame spacing 1023 Check this if you would like to skip the storage of the 1st pass output. It is often very large. 1024 Performs a dummy 2nd pass - doesn't output any video data 1025 The higher this value, the more bits get taken from frames larger than the average size, and redistributed to others 1026 The higher this value, the more bits get assigned to frames below the average frame size 1027 The higher this value, the longer the codec has to smooth out bit allocation 1028 Payback with bias to small frames 1029 Payback proportionally (all frames treated equally) 1030 Location for 1st pass stats file to be saved to 1031 Location for 2nd pass curve stats to be loaded from - External mode only 1035 Credits begin at this frame 1036 Credits end at this frame 1038 Credits start at this frame 1040 Credits end at this frame 1042 Encode credits at this % rate of the rest of the movie 1044 Encode credits I-frames with this quantizer 1046 Encode credits P-frames with this quantizer 1048 Encode starting credits to fit into this many kbytes 1050 Encode ending credits to fit into this many kbytes 1051 Enable XviD's internal CPU detection 1052 Override XviD's internal CPU detection (not recommended) 1059 Load a pair of custom intra/inter matrices 1060 Save the current intra/inter matrices to a file 1193 Use Foxer's alternative 2-pass curve system (still uses bias and boost information from other 2-pass tab) 1195 How much influence a poor desired quality (file size) has on minimum relative quality 1197 The percentage of the bonus that will be applied with bias (the rest is proportionally distributed) 1198 How aggressively the curve affects bitrate distribution 1199 Distance from the average framesize where the minimum relative quality will be applied 1201 Distance from the average framesize where the best quality will be applied 1202 The minimum produced quality in relation to the best produced quality 1203 Enables interlaced frame support - only use if your source contains interlacing artifacts (i.e. fields instead of progressive frames) 1204 How much of the overflow the codec can eat into during oversized sections - larger values will bridge the gap faster 1205 Maximum number of sequential B-frames. When set to < 0 the original IP-frame encoder is used. 1207 Ratio used to calculate the b-frame quantizer.\n\nBVOP quant = (AVG(past VOP quant, future VOP quant) * quant ratio + quant offset) / 100 1210 How much of the overflow the codec can eat into during undersized sections - larger values will bridge the gap faster 1211 Constrains 2-pass encodes to the specified maximum bitrate 1212 Determines how slowly it will adjust the current encoding quality based upon scene intensity - this has the strongest influence on quality 1213 Determines how slowly it adapts to the current adjusted quality 1214 Provides said number of frames worth of buffer between the adjusted encoding quality and lowest possible quality 1215 When enabled the P-frames and B-frames are packed together in the one bitstreams. This permits decoding without delay.\neg. [I] [PB] [B] [empty] [PB] [B] [empty] [P]\n\nPacked bitstreams were introduced in DivX 5.01. 1219 Generate DivX 5.x compatible B-frames. DivX 5.x fails to decode B-frames where the future reference frame is an I-frame. 1224 Frame dropping ratio [0-100]. 0 = no frame dropping .. 100 = drop all frames. 1226 I-frames appearing in the range below this value will be treated as consecutive keyframes. 1227 Reduction of bitrate for the first consecutive i-frames. The last i-frame will get treated normally. 1229 Encode credits in black&white 1231 Use Global Motion Compensation to better catch camera pans etc. 1232 Use Quarter PixEL resolution for encoding for a more precise motion estimation 1233 Use chroma information to detect motion (slow!) 1234 B-frame quantizer offset from last p-frame quantizer; refer to b-frame quant ratio (above) 1238 VHQ enables an additional search process to increase quality. 1239 Interpolates colours in bright/dark areas for achieving a nicer edge impression