I did another HandBrake test using Apple TV 3, it generated a 159mb file, instead of 111, and it actually ran a bit faster... 14:30. I love the fact that the files are so small compared to Compressor, but Compressor is so much faster on my MacBook 3:37.
You are using single-pass encoding, right? You should with constant quality. A second pass would add nothing to the equation.
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Great resource, thanks!
In my case, I normally have 3 possible destinations. Tablets like iPads, media players like Apple TV, and streaming sites like YouTube (which should re-process the stream into all sorts of devices and sizes for you).
I've generally just used Apple's YouTube preset for the stuff I put online, then used the Apple TV 3rd gen as my second target (using the newer Apple Devices HD (Best Quality). While the file size was 5-6 times bigger, it renders at a 5-10 times faster than HandBrake.
I think I'll use HandBrake to eventually spit out a nice small file for archives, but send the larger ones to YouTube, so when they process and re-compress it into other formats, they are starting with more data.
I'm very excited to hear about HandBrake's beta using OpenCL. As I've said, that would be a real game changer for a lot of people.
I guess I am old school when it comes to compression. I prefer the smallest possible file with the highest possible quality, even if it takes longer to encode; at least within reason. I won't double compression time for a 5% improvement in quality.