

References (just to get started with the many complexities with video encoding, let alone playback.):Īs a reference to why I think Enscape3D's MP4 videos may not be playing well in Windows without using VLC is the Codec ID of the container file and/or the Video Stream:

In short, compliant files should play in Windows and Chrome no problems, files that are not (for any of a large multitude of reasons and variables) will have problems playing or will not play at all.Ĭan you guys test (anybody reading this post) if files exported directly from Enscape (not converted/transcoded) can play in Chrome or not? That would be an indication of what is happening with the exported videos from Enscape.

(Each stream inside a video file can have their own codec. I think it is only a matter of either adjusting the codec settings for the MP4 container and/or the video stream inside the mp4 container. I for one liked the smaller file size at the 120 FPS so that, if need be, I could play the file on a not so high end computer hooked up to a nice 4K monitor and have it play several videos on a shuffle playlist.īack to the issue of the Enscape videos stuttering/skipping frames. also, you can always try different settings on the encoder to achieve results better suited to your needs. I did not notice much difference in the two videos so far, but there could be. having said that, with any compression for video or images, like JPEG, there is always some kind of loss in quality. Not really that I could tell, but then again, my monitor is only 3440x1440 and not 4K to do a side by side comparison. Wow thats impressive! Is there any loss in the visuals?
