Will this work on a Powerbook G4?
I see that it needs a bus powered USB port, and I know that the G4's port don't put out as much power as a standard powered USB port.
Also, does anyone use this with iMovie?
How are the speeds there?
I have the Turbo 264 and I'm quite impressed with it, but using the bundled software I don't seem to be getting chapter marks in my converted movies. Anyone know if Popcorn would preserve the DVD chapter marks?
I use 'Metadata Hootenanny' to add the chapters afterwards, it can either read them from your dvd or download them from the web (a bit hit and miss).
I'd also advise using 'fairmount' to save you the bother of mac the rippering.
I say again- 'mac the rippering'.
Dont forget to use 'meta x' first to add those tags tho- as it doesn't like adding tags to mov files, and you might be stuck without them afterwards.
Also, does anyone use this with iMovie?
How are the speeds there?
you know, i just ripped something from dvd using the ipod high setting adjusting for widescreen @1500, and i have to say, the quality absolutely sucks.
Well, it I don't think it's fair to say the quality sucks even though it is not what you can expect from the best software encoders. Anyway I hope they will keep improving this product with future software updates.
I'll probably end up giving my mom the turbo 264
You rip with MTR then drop the folder into the 264. I use it all the time. Quality isn't as good as Handbrake, but for me, it doesn't matter. I'd rather have the conversion speed of the 264... I only use handbrake for my favorites.
Shoesy said:I have the Turbo 264 and I'm quite impressed with it, but using the bundled software I don't seem to be getting chapter marks in my converted movies. Anyone know if Popcorn would preserve the DVD chapter marks?
I use 'Metadata Hootenanny' to add the chapters afterwards, it can either read them from your dvd or download them from the web (a bit hit and miss).
I'd also advise using 'fairmount' to save you the bother of mac the rippering.
I say again- 'mac the rippering'.
Dont forget to use 'meta x' first to add those tags tho- as it doesn't like adding tags to mov files, and you might be stuck without them afterwards.
El Gato is losing more points now. I submitted a ticket 48 hrs ago - haven't heard a peep back yet.
Ok well reading these posts, different people see differently...!
I got the turbo for my older G5 and the speeds (and lower CPU use) are definitely worth the money for me.
Yes its tru the quality is not the same as if you tweak in something like handbrake; but i use mine to watch stuff on portable devices and its great for that. I did even use it once to do a higher quality encode for something I wanted to keep and I think it did a good job. Again, the time saving was a big thing for me.
Im very happy with the turbo, much cheaper than a new iMac. I wouldnt agree with people who are saying "quality sucks", thats not true, its more what you are encoding for and how perfect you need your video. If you have an older mac i think it is definitely worth considering. love mine. 😀
I just picked up the turbo.264, and I must say I'm quite impressed with the output for Apple TV at HIGH setting (150%) The file size are about 1.09 GB, but the quality of the output is amazing. I guess version 1.1 of the software has made some serious improvements. I believe it outputs it out to anamorphic since the size of some of the DVDs I've converted are at 814x344 for Apple TV. I believe it used to be 800x600. On my old iMac G5 at 2.0Ghz I get about 24fps at Apple TV High settings. On Handbrake it would crawl at 2 or 3fps. If I set to anamorphic on HB even less than 2. On my MBP at 2.1GHz the iMac G5 can encode at similar speeds. So for older Macs its awesome and for freeing up CPU on new Macs its a great device to have.
again, why would you output at 814 when the original is 720 - why would you want to upscale. I don't understand/?
I just did my first encode last night using iPod High. The quality definitely does not compare to using a software 2-pass encoder, but damn it sure is fast. I'm going to try encoding the same video tonight with the AppleTV setting to compare. I'll try to take some screenshots and post a comparison.
Agreed. It's not as good as Handbrake, specially with no 2 pass option. I wish they can add that on there and allow subtitles. Then it would be an awesome product. My old iMac G5 2.0 can do one movie at 33fps instead of the usual 2-5fps. I could use my MBP 2.1, but I'm using it for too much work and always on the go. I can cue up a bunch on Elgato and it goes right through it.
For what I need it for, its good enough. The video is a lot better than what our digital cable network is spitting out.
I also tried Popcorn3 since it was so cheap someone said you can do two pass. Not true. Anyway I tried it the files are huge and the quality was crap. Turbo gave out a much cleaner picture and smooth playback. So far P3 is a bust.



Here's my comparison shots. The dimensions of each shot aren't perfect, since I was using Cmd-Shift-4 to take each shot. The most obvious difference can be seen in all the detail missing from the wall with the shelves in the background.
iPod High
View attachment 86982
AppleTV High
View attachment 86983
Original DVD
View attachment 86984
(Edit) I just noticed that the Turbo264 cut off a portion of the frame on the sides and bottom. I was just using all automatic settings, so I'll have to do some testing to figure out what happened.
(Edit2) I've got another encode going right now, and it looks like it was overscan cutting off some of the frame. I turned that off and I saw the missing part of the frame in the little preview box this time (I tried an encode just before this one with Overscan On, and saw the frame appeared cut in the preview box). I'm also trying some of the settings I used to use years ago when I did xvid encodes. 640x360 size, and 1200kbps bit rate. I don't own an AppleTV, and don't watch movies on my iPod, so I just need to find the settings i'm happy with for playback on my MacBook.