>>28887Time flies. Also I should have mentioned. You can browse the source code for the official branch at bitbucket. But no one outside of the in-group can submit merge requests. Also they used to host it openly on github but they yanked it down a few years back because drama/copyright/blah blah blah. So a lot of people that were contributing left for AV1. Which isn't going to be used by anyone outside of a handful of crazy folks for another 10+ years (no hardware support, no set-top support).
hevc-aq vs. aq-modes 3/4/5 is also very source dependent. They don't do anything end user side that makes a difference. It'll all play fine in the standard decoder even the "hack" that is aq-mode 5. It's only different on the encoding side of things. So even if hevq-aq was "broken" and "old" as such it will still continue to work until the heat death of the universe. So one could work with it as I have and produce good results provided they were willing to work with it instead of against it.
Most people are just throwing garbage in and getting garbage out and calling it good. In truth I don't really require an aq-mode to pull bits to dark areas of the picture. I'm already doing that by;
1) Injecting artificial grain into darker scenes via scene filtering
2) Manually boosting bitrates for those scenes using --zones
Another thing you might find interesting; There is another "experimental" feature called --aq-motion. It does some math magic in all aq modes to pull bits to areas where there is motion. Neat right? Here is the problem. No one uses it. The docs haven't been updated in at least 4 years concerning it. No one seems to have worked on it in that time. Most people don't know it exists.
But if you have good google-fu there is an anime blog or forum post from years ago that suggests using it for "high quality BD encoding of anime". Yet it doesn't describe what it does, why it's better or what groups have used it. So it's basically ones guy's word that didn't even bother to leave any contact details.
Most likely he threw random BD at it and thought it looked better to his eyes on his monitor on that particular day. But now it's gospel. Since he's obviously the authority of such subjects since he's got a thread on encoding forum that is referenced by every newbie trying to break-in to this stuff.
The journey for every encoder is the same; You decide you want to start playing around with this hobby. You find doom9 forums. You find out all the information is very outdated. You turn to discord and the "experts" from the private trackers and nyaa for help. They tell you the information on doom9 is old and bad. You trust them. You spend weeks downloading their scripts and chasing down crap in various chat rooms that aren't hosted on proper websites for some reason. You mess around with python and vapoursynth for days. You break python install somehow. You fix it. You spend 12-24 hours at a time waiting around for test encodes to finish. They look like crap. You go back for more advice. No one wants to help you because you're a newbie. You do this for years.
Then at the end of your journey you discover all the experts don't really know much at all. For example, they can barely speak English, they couldn't pass high school algebra and they usually have bad taste in anime. The foremost "expert" on anime on discord right now is a guy that rips anime from CR and other web services, runs it through a python script and publishes the results to a blog. Everyone praises him like he's anime jesus. Half the time he didn't even run that script correctly and his information is wrong. You can verify it yourself because if you can into python interpreter and download the public script you can get the result yourself in 60 seconds. Since it'll automatically descale/rescale with every available kernel and spit out a fancy graph for you.
Then you go further down the hole. You start seeing the same names you've seen on trackers on the discord channel. They're talking about inane bullshit and admit to the dumbest things. They link directly to posts on /a/ and cry about them. They don't understand humor. They admit that they don't like the anime they're releasing. They admit that they don't know what DAR/SAR and NTSC/PAL means. Along with other grade school-tier knowledge about video that even my out of touch father knows. They admit to doing stuff like keeping other people's work off the public trackers and engaging in witch hunts/shaming campaigns to get people banned from such places. They link directly to comment sections and threads and ask everyone else to dogpile in. They call 16 year old anime girls "lolis" and claim everyone is a pedophile/homophobic/nazi/today's buzzword while also claiming they're being oppressed/mistreated/don't like bullies/don't like use of slurs. You know the type.
It's at that point when you realize they probably aren't worth paying attention to. But also that their scripts and advice is just re-packaged avisynth script from 25 years ago. Oh and the avisynth version uses half the RAM and runs twice as fast. Oh and it produces a better result. But it's "old" and "bit rotting" so you shouldn't even try it. Just ignore that thread on doom9 where a guy is keeping all that stuff up to date and constantly adding new features. You should use vapoursynth instead. Where the editor takes 50 seconds to open on a modern CPU and freezes all of the time for no reason.
If I sound old and bitter it's because I am.
This is probably the signal most frustrating hobby to get into as a newbie.