![]() Have you ever wanted your footage to look sharper with more detail? Take HD footage all the way up to 8K for use in high-quality projects. Video Enhance AI is the perfect way to take good footage and make it great. Some call it “magic”, but we call it the power of AI. We developed Video Enhance AI using groundbreaking machine learning technology to upscale video footage intelligently, for crisp details and motion consistency all the way up to 8K resolution. There has never been a way to perfectly recreate high-resolution video from low-resolution footage. Traditional video upscaling simply stretches resolution, degrading quality and destroying details. Incredible Video Upscaling for Professional Filmmakers Using intelligent AI technology, Video Enhance AI is the most powerful video upscaling software ever released. Trained on thousands of videos and combining information from multiple input video frames, Topaz Video Enhance AI will enlarge and enhance your footage up to 8K resolution with true details and motion consistency. Stunning video enlargements with groundbreaking AI technology. But for well established methods of compression it hides any useful info.Topaz Video Enhance AI v2.6.4 (圆4) Pre-Activated Which is really strange to use even less user friendly, arbitrary numbers while at the same time offering large thumbnails and examples an tutorials in the program for AI models. Besides, ffmpeg as powerful as it is, it is also notoriously not user friendly. Or any other method of compression we are using needs to be clearly labeled and listed and allow users to change, otherwise its working half blind if not totally blind. What is the bit rate and what is the file size based on bit rate. We need well established numbers that we can use as targets so we can not work half blind. At the maximum value of 35, the quality would be bad.”īut that is like asking people how do you cook eggs, and the guy say, cook it until you feel it its ok. At a value of 15, it’s a good compromise, in my opinion. All I know is a value of 0 means lossless output but very large file, and 20 means much smaller file but compression artifacts will be visible to some extent. “I do hope Topaz will clarify, but I think compression factor 20 and CRF 20 are one and the same, as Topaz uses ffmpeg for video output. ![]() I hope someone from Topaz team can explain it, and they can rework the interface for future releases so it makes sense and it is not only consistent within the Topaz interface and applications, but also consistent in regards to standards used by most applications already. Thank you for your link, but I remain with more questions than answers, sadly. Its like four different developers worked on it, and no one talk to each other. ![]() There is not even “?” little tool-tip indicator for it, even if there is one for “keep audio” option. Is it 20x factor or 20% of something? And of what? I’m sad to say, the user interface design in that instance is amateur. Everything from bit rate, bit depth, color space etc, but not compression factor, whatever that means. There is a whole slue of terminology mentioned in most programs. There is no reference I can find or explanation. Thanks for the reply, but Constant Rate Factor (CRF) mentioned in the FFMPEG guide, is not the same as compression factor mentioned in the Topaz interface.
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