But there is a trade-off. A dark one.
Eternity doesn't do "good enough."
Using the x265 codec—not the default version, but heavily customized builds with parameters that look like a wizard's spellbook ( --no-sao --deblock -1:-1 --aq-mode 3 --no-strong-intra-smoothing )—Eternity manages to compress 4K HDR content down to the size of a 1080p Blu-ray. For the preservationist, this is a miracle. Hard drives are not getting cheaper; electricity is not getting greener. Eternity’s encodes allow collectors to archive entire filmographies without building a server farm in their basement.
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But there is a trade-off. A dark one.
Eternity doesn't do "good enough."
Using the x265 codec—not the default version, but heavily customized builds with parameters that look like a wizard's spellbook ( --no-sao --deblock -1:-1 --aq-mode 3 --no-strong-intra-smoothing )—Eternity manages to compress 4K HDR content down to the size of a 1080p Blu-ray. For the preservationist, this is a miracle. Hard drives are not getting cheaper; electricity is not getting greener. Eternity’s encodes allow collectors to archive entire filmographies without building a server farm in their basement.