indigo6alpha | 111 points
Hey guys, which subtitles should I be using for the 1080p?
[-] PeytonCotchin | 1 points
Anyone?
Anyone know the source? is it the AMZN repack?
[-] UltraCruelHeadFuel | 4 points
just checked looks like the AMZN repack comparison
[-] AndresAbuelo | 1 points
pass?
[-] AndresAbuelo | -1 points
z77zHLxFPrnkifPKjFAgXax6A41I7z1fHRQerNegy0 links dead
[-] gandalftheshai | 5 points
z77zHLxFPrnkifPKjFAgXax6A41I7z1fHRQerNegy0U
no its not just checked its working 326 mb
[-] gandalftheshai | 1 points
great waiting for 1080p
[-] gandalftheshai | 1 points
How long since 1080p ?
[-] indigo6alpha | 3 points
added
[-] gandalftheshai | 2 points
thank you
Yes! 1080p please
[-] indigo6alpha | 2 points
[-] top_KeK_420 | 1 points
why is this file so small and the others so big but still 1080p? Is this worse quality ?
[-] Axelstrife | 7 points
x265 is why.
x265>x264. Quality wise and size wise. The downside is that some media players, smart TVs and consoles cannot read x265. But if you have the hardware/software in place: x265 4 Lyfe.
It is worse quality than the 1.6GB x264 files (and those are not necessary the best, with x264 GoT needs ~2 GB/episode depending on the episode to give a good picture).
x265 is more efficient, but nowhere that efficient. For good quality in 1080p you'd need 1.4-2.3GB depending on the episode, if you use decent encoding options. That's with crf=18, a bit worse than crf=16 but still great.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Efficiency_Video_Coding
[-] WikiTextBot | 1 points
High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC), also known as H.265 and MPEG-H Part 2, is a video compression standard, one of several potential successors to the widely used AVC (H.264 or MPEG-4 Part 10). In comparison to AVC, HEVC offers about double the data compression ratio at the same level of video quality, or substantially improved video quality at the same bit rate. It supports resolutions up to 8192×4320, including 8K UHD.
In most ways, HEVC is an extension of the concepts in H.264/MPEG-4 AVC. Both work by comparing different parts of a frame of video to find areas that are redundant, both within a single frame as well as subsequent frames. These redundant areas are then replaced with a short description instead of the original pixels.
^[ ^PM ^| ^Exclude ^me ^| ^Exclude ^from ^subreddit ^| ^FAQ ^/ ^Information ^| ^Source ^] ^Downvote ^to ^remove ^| ^v0.24
[-] aravindhstanley | 1 points
Can you guys help me out. Give me the full link. New here
[-] indigo6alpha | 15 points
Replace "mega://" with "mega.nz/" in the "
[-] cheekybrekyy | 1 points
Thanks man
[-] [deleted] | 1 points
[deleted]
[-] TJHookerWithAPenis | 2 points
Probably because whatever you are watching on can't decode x265 video or can't do it fast enough.
[-] Aftermathdt | 1 points
how do you download these links?
[-] indigo6alpha | 2 points
Replace "mega://" with "mega.nz/" in the "L" text and go to that link. When it prompts you to enter the key, paste the text of "K"
[-] Kaoulombre | 1 points
Savior. Thanks a lot
[-] SubZorro | 4 points | Jul 17 2017 03:34:05
Subtitles for this episode:
^This ^list ^of ^subtitles ^are ^taken ^from ^opensubtitles.org ^| ^For ^feedback ^or ^suggestions ^contact ^/u/indigo6alpha
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[-] stormarsenal | 7 points | Jul 17 2017 07:39:48
Second sub works.
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