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Best way to convert MKV for Apple TV 2...?
Hi there
This is maybe a question answered elsewhere but I wanted to see if anyone had any more recent suggestions. What is the best way to convert an HD MKV file for Apple TV 2? Should I be using Handbrake? If so, is the nightly build the best? Any suggestions for settings? I want to convert the files with the best possible quality and then drop them into iTunes purely for playback on the Apple TV 2. As an aside- should HD content I've converted have an 'HD' flag in the list of titles on the Apple TV menu (like purchased content does)? |
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#2 |
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If the mkv has H.264 video and AAC audio (many of them do) within the ATV2's specs, you just need to put them into an mp4 container. You can do that with something like Subler or MKVTools to remux them into an mp4/m4v without re-encoding, which takes a lot of time. If it's in H.264 video but weird audio (like ogg) you can use MKVTools to convert only the audio to AAC and pass-through the video into an mp4/m4v. For any mkv's needing re-encoding, Handbrake is usually best.
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2.0 GHz quad-core i7 15" MacBook Pro 2011 iPad 2 (Black) WiFi+3G 64GB iPhone 4S (White) 64 GB |
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#3 | |
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Use iFlicks, I won't go into detail about it but it's a very nice program. Thanks AE
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32 GB iPad WIFI | 2011 27" iMac 2.7Ghz QC i5 1TB HD |
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#4 | |
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#5 |
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Thanks for the tips. Out of curiosity- should I expect a HD icon on the Apple TV menu?
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#6 |
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Unless you intend to have both a standard version and an HD version, you needn't worry about it. If you want to, it's a piece of metadata you can set with an app like Subler.
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2.0 GHz quad-core i7 15" MacBook Pro 2011 iPad 2 (Black) WiFi+3G 64GB iPhone 4S (White) 64 GB |
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#7 |
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OK no I will only have the HD- I didn't know whether it was a flag when iTunes 'recognized' it was HD or if it was cosmetic.
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#8 |
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The latest version of Subler converts audio from unsupported formats to aac. It works quite well for mkv.
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#9 | |
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#10 | |
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I used MKVTools on Conviction.mkv (4.5GB 620p file). In the track info area it listed Video #1: (h264) and Audio #1: (dts 6ch.) I used the mp4 tab and left the settings to default (video/audio passthrough). In 5 minutes on my old 2007 MacBook it spat out Conviction.mkv.a1.dts (968mb) + Conviction.mkv.v1.h264 (1.7GB). What do I do with these two files? I need to remux them into one m4v/mp4 file right? With what? EDIT: Ah I see what I did wrong. I used the mp4 tab when I should've just used the Quick tab-> ATV option. . Last edited by patent10021; Jan 7, 2011 at 06:05 AM. |
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#11 | |
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I'm not sure why you got those as the output, but those are the raw audio and video files that were inside the mkv. Ideally, you'd want to put the H.264 video and the audio (converted to a more iDevice-friendly codec like AC3) into an mp4. The H.264 video should be fine, but the DTS audio may be troublesome. I'm not sure if MKVTools has the capability to convert DTS audio yet. I'm not sure what does, so hopefully someone who knows can give you a better answer about the audio.
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2.0 GHz quad-core i7 15" MacBook Pro 2011 iPad 2 (Black) WiFi+3G 64GB iPhone 4S (White) 64 GB |
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#12 | |
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#13 |
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MKVtools is by far the best apple to remux our movies. Subler you will lose surround if there is a dts track and iFlicks made movies unplayablle when the Apple TV was updated.
Stick with MKVtools, works excellent. |
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#14 |
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Isn't there a way to batch conver with MKVTool? Could process a lot while I'm sleeping.
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#15 |
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Doesn't the full version allow that? It's only $4.99
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#16 |
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I'll try it. I have the full version but didn't see any batch area. This does take longer than I thought thought. My single 4.5GB mkv took about 30 minutes on my 2007 Macbook. Hopefully no more than 10 minutes when I get my iMac. All done automatically but still. I have about 2TB of mkv files. That's why I JB'd. I'm testing this MKVTools method to see what is worth it for me. Also my Japanese anime mkv files have hard coded subs so I'll have to see if MKVTools keeps those.
EDIT: So I ended up with a 3.85GB m4v file and aTV doesn't recognize it in my movies folder. I thought it was supposed to end up a mp4 file? . Last edited by patent10021; Jan 7, 2011 at 07:49 AM. |
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#17 | |
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Taken from the MKV Tools website
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http://www.kerstetter.net/index.php/...software/metax - Mac http://www.danhinsley.com/metax/metax.html - Windows port I love it. It is quick and easy and gives you good control. By default, HD is set to 'no' for everything I have put in there. I don't have it in front of me right now, but I believe that is one the second tab. Just make sure you set your source and destination directories to be different, or you may actually send the file into the void. |
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#21 |
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Your ATV will recognise the higher resolution of an HD file, and automatically flag it as "HD" in the menu. iTunes will not but, as mentioned above, this only matters if you plan to nest HD and SD versions of the same movie. FWIW, you can get iTunes to show the HD flag by tagging your file as HD using Subler.
__________________
27" iMac (2.93GHz i7, 4GB RAM, 1TB HDD); 32GB iPhone 4GS; 32GB iPhone 3GS (used as iPod), 3 x TV3, 2TB WD "My Book Studio XL" HDD; 4TB WD "ShareSpace" NAS
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#22 |
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Are you sure about that? I don't think it actually flags it automatically. I think it requires you to use a tool to give it the HD flag.
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#23 |
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I always tag my video files, but it is my understanding that ATV flags content as HD automatically if there are more than 480 lines. Can't confirm that from first hand experience, though.
__________________
27" iMac (2.93GHz i7, 4GB RAM, 1TB HDD); 32GB iPhone 4GS; 32GB iPhone 3GS (used as iPod), 3 x TV3, 2TB WD "My Book Studio XL" HDD; 4TB WD "ShareSpace" NAS
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#24 |
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I run my MKVs thru MKVTools. Under the MP4 tab, I select the Apple TV preset, pass thru the video, pass thru AAC or AC3 audio or convert to one of those formats. You can also simply mux in subtitles instead of having to burn them into the video track. I then run the created .m4v file thru Vidalin in order to tag with metadata and cover art and then add the tagged file to iTunes.
It's a process with a few easy steps and by no means fully automated, but at the end I get pristine quality, full surround sound and beautiful metadata tags on my movies. Works for TV shows too. |
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#25 |
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This isn't true. Files need a special tag to have the HD flag. Vidalin is one of the few programs I know that can add this flag.
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