Good video. I purchased the Video Proc program a few months ago. Originally I used it on a few old photos in the early 2000s and was very impressed with the output. One thing I noticed later is that when I zoomed into the images you will see thousands of tiny squares that the program divide the images. The program does a good job of enhancing each tiny square but not a perfect job. So if zoomed all the way in you would notice some artifacts or blurry words turn into shapes. Tried to upconvert an old family video (240p) to HD and a 30 minute video took about 20 hours on my older 7th gen i7 Intel, 32GB ram, and 4GB GPU. Will give it another try once I upgrade my system which should reduce the time to a fraction.
I have noticed many comments online praising the effectiveness of AI Super Resolution in VideoProc in upscaling old photos. Would it be possible for you to create a tutorial on this topic soon?
Yeah I'm trying to make something a little different I know there's lots of videos on that but I find it's a topic that's been done to death. Is there something particular you'd like to see that you haven't seen in other videos?
Just as a fyi, 4k is 2160p along the y axis, where as youve mentioned 2560 which is a horizontal pixel count the suit the 1600p youve selected, or the 1440p its more commonly used for. Not a big issue. However if 1600p is the highest it goes, you might be better off just upscaling to 1920 x 1080 if you have a native fhd tv. As native is always best. Even on a 4k tv it might be better, as 4k is just a 2x multiple of 1080p, and therefore doesnt need to be stretched across half pixels. On pc games for example, on a 4k tv or monitor, 1440p can look a bit muddy as the pixels dont line up with just making a 2x2 box like it can with 1080p.
Do you also know a free converter tool for Linux? 😊 Thank you for this Video. But you are not so converted from NTSC525 to 4k the resolution is not higher for example of you watch your face 😂
Try VideoProc Converter AI: www.kqzyfj.com/click-101047044-15650166
Nice tutorial, Robbie, I tried to upscale my old DV videos, impressed by the result! Thanks for sharing~
Good video. I purchased the Video Proc program a few months ago. Originally I used it on a few old photos in the early 2000s and was very impressed with the output.
One thing I noticed later is that when I zoomed into the images you will see thousands of tiny squares that the program divide the images. The program does a good job of enhancing each tiny square but not a perfect job. So if zoomed all the way in you would notice some artifacts or blurry words turn into shapes.
Tried to upconvert an old family video (240p) to HD and a 30 minute video took about 20 hours on my older 7th gen i7 Intel, 32GB ram, and 4GB GPU. Will give it another try once I upgrade my system which should reduce the time to a fraction.
I have noticed many comments online praising the effectiveness of AI Super Resolution in VideoProc in upscaling old photos. Would it be possible for you to create a tutorial on this topic soon?
Yeah I'm trying to make something a little different I know there's lots of videos on that but I find it's a topic that's been done to death. Is there something particular you'd like to see that you haven't seen in other videos?
Just as a fyi, 4k is 2160p along the y axis, where as youve mentioned 2560 which is a horizontal pixel count the suit the 1600p youve selected, or the 1440p its more commonly used for.
Not a big issue.
However if 1600p is the highest it goes, you might be better off just upscaling to 1920 x 1080 if you have a native fhd tv. As native is always best.
Even on a 4k tv it might be better, as 4k is just a 2x multiple of 1080p, and therefore doesnt need to be stretched across half pixels.
On pc games for example, on a 4k tv or monitor, 1440p can look a bit muddy as the pixels dont line up with just making a 2x2 box like it can with 1080p.
Do you also know a free converter tool for Linux? 😊 Thank you for this Video. But you are not so converted from NTSC525 to 4k the resolution is not higher for example of you watch your face 😂
Linux has Handbrake but no ai up converting. I agree Ai should all be open source by law.