[MPlayer-DOCS] r21933 - trunk/DOCS/xml/en/encoding-guide.xml
gpoirier
subversion at mplayerhq.hu
Mon Jan 15 10:12:10 CET 2007
Author: gpoirier
Date: Mon Jan 15 10:12:10 2007
New Revision: 21933
Modified:
trunk/DOCS/xml/en/encoding-guide.xml
Log:
fixes suggested by Diego
Modified: trunk/DOCS/xml/en/encoding-guide.xml
==============================================================================
--- trunk/DOCS/xml/en/encoding-guide.xml (original)
+++ trunk/DOCS/xml/en/encoding-guide.xml Mon Jan 15 10:12:10 2007
@@ -4121,18 +4121,18 @@
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para>
You want any computer illiterate to be able to watch your encode on
- any major platform (Windows, Mac OSX, Unices …).
+ any major platform (Windows, Mac OS X, Unices …).
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
<application>QuickTime</application> is able to take advantage of more
- hardware and software acceleration features of Mac OSX than
+ hardware and software acceleration features of Mac OS X than
platform-independent players like <application>MPlayer</application>
or <application>VLC</application>.
That means that your encodes have a chance to be played smoothly by older
G4-powered machines.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
- <application>QuickTime</application> 7 support the next-generation codec H.264,
+ <application>QuickTime</application> 7 supports the next-generation codec H.264,
which yields significantly better picture quality than previous codec
generations (MPEG-2, MPEG-4 …).
</para></listitem>
@@ -4144,7 +4144,7 @@
<para>
<application>QuickTime</application> 7 supports H.264 video and AAC audio,
- but it does not support them muxed in AVI container format.
+ but it does not support them muxed in the AVI container format.
However, you can use <application>MEncoder</application> to encode
the video and audio, and then use an external program such as
<application>mp4creator</application> (part of the
@@ -4191,7 +4191,7 @@
<title>Cropping</title>
<para>
Suppose you want to rip your freshly bought copy of "The Chronicles of
- Narnia" Your DVD is region 1,
+ Narnia". Your DVD is region 1,
which means it is NTSC. The example below would still apply to PAL,
except you would omit <option>-ofps 24000/1001</option> and use slightly
different <option>crop</option> and <option>scale</option> dimensions.
@@ -4224,7 +4224,7 @@
with a sample aspect ratio other than 1, so you will need to upscale
(which wastes a lot of disk space) or downscale (which loses some
details of the source) the video to square pixels.
- Either way you do it, this is highly inefficient, but simply can not
+ Either way you do it, this is highly inefficient, but simply cannot
be avoided if you want your video to be playable by
<application>QuickTime</application> 7.
<application>MEncoder</application> can apply the appropriate upscaling
@@ -4263,7 +4263,7 @@
<title>Bitrate</title>
<para>
- As always, the selection of bitrate is a matter the technical properties
+ As always, the selection of bitrate is a matter of the technical properties
of the source, as explained
<link linkend="menc-feat-dvd-mpeg4-resolution-bitrate">here</link>, as
well as a matter of taste.
More information about the MPlayer-DOCS
mailing list