The.Thirteenth.Floor.1999.1080p.BluRay.HEVC.DTS-LiNUX
- Type:
- Video > HD - Movies
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- 49
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- 4.67 GiB (5018184915 Bytes)
- Info:
- IMDB
- Uploaded:
- 2020-05-05 16:38 GMT
- By:
- Fant0men
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- Info Hash: CB56175FE70F3809A858C45F4736FA6CAE152180
The Thirteenth Floor (1999) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0139809/ Plot summary: A computer scientist running a virtual reality simulation of 1937 becomes the primary suspect when his colleague and mentor is murdered. Video: HEVC 5000 kb/s Audio: dts (DTS), 48000 Hz, 5.1(side), 1536 kb/s Subtitles: Ara, Bul, Cze, Eng, Gre, Heb, Hun, Ice, Pol, Rus, Slo, Spa, Swe, Tur *** "High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC), also known as H.265 and MPEG-H Part 2, is a video compression standard, designed as a successor to the widely used AVC (H.264 or MPEG-4 Part 10). In comparison to AVC, HEVC offers from 25% to 50% better data compression at the same level of video quality, or substantially improved video quality at the same bit rate." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Efficiency_Video_Coding 10-bit color depth should ALWAYS be used when encoding HEVC (x265), because it saves bandwidth and results in higher quality per bitrate. Even if the source is only 8-bit, like regular BluRays are, 10-bit encoding should be used for the reasons stated. Regular BluRays are encoded in H264, not H265 (HEVC). There's a new disc format called "Ultra HD Blu-ray" ("4K Ultra HD"), which is encoded in H265, with 4K resolution. Unless the source of an encode is this new format, it's in 8-bit color depth. "... encoding pictures using 10-bit processing always saves bandwidth compared to 8-bit processing, whatever the source pixel bit depth." http://x264.nl/x264/10bit_02-ateme-why_does_10bit_save_bandwidth.pdf ***