Comment by g4zj
1 month ago
I'm curious what the issue is with using Handbrake? I use it all the time on macOS and it's generally a simple and effective tool for my purposes.
1 month ago
I'm curious what the issue is with using Handbrake? I use it all the time on macOS and it's generally a simple and effective tool for my purposes.
Handbrake is fine if you truly need to reencode (aka “transcode”) your video, but if you find yourself with a video that your player can’t read, you might be able to just change the container format (remux it) using ffmpeg, copying the video and audio streams directly across.
With video there are 3 formats: the video stream itself, the audio stream itself, and the container (only the container is knowable from the extension). Formats could technically be combined in any combination.
The video stream especially is costly in CPU to encode, and can degrade quality significantly to transcode so it’s just a shame to re-encode if the original codec is usable.
Container format mkv is notorious for not being supported out of the box on lots of consumer devices, even if they might have codecs for the audio and video streams they typically contain. (It has cool features geeks like, though, but for some reason it gets less support.)
Subtitles are another kind of stream aside from video/audio.
Also there's one user-level aspect of MKV that makes it not too surprising to me: It can contain any number of video/audio/subtitle streams and the interface needs some way of allowing the user to pick between them. Easier to just skip that complexity, I guess.
If you search the page you'll find a reference to having “numerous foot guns”.
I can't say I've experienced either of the ones mentioned, but I have had trouble in the past with output resolution selection (ending up with a larger file than expected with the encoding resolution much larger than the intended display resolution). User error, of course, but that tab is a bit non-obvious so it might be fair to call it a footgun.
the short version is there's nothing wrong with it for your use case.
The author's POV is that the handbrake is a lossy conversion and often people use it in cases where they could have used a different tool that is lossless.
My uses of handbrake are that I always want a lossy conversion so no issue. A good example is anytime I make screen capture and want to post it on github. I want it to be under the 10meg limit (or whatever it is) so I want it to be re-encoded to be smaller. I don't mind the loss in quality.
the author can't stand how it simply re-encodes videos instead of extracting the video tracks and puts them in new containers.