Togijak Posted January 29, 2019 Share Posted January 29, 2019 If you reduce the noise (for example) in a video you can trust that the result is better than the source but it would be better to see the facts. I found a tool called Kinovea that can compare to videos but Kinovea is a video player for sport analysis. It provides a set of tools to capture, slow down, study, compare, annotate and measure technical performances. with completely different objectives, which is also shown by the fact that only a visual comparison in very small windows is offered. any better solution? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
strotee Posted January 30, 2019 Share Posted January 30, 2019 MediaInfo gives a lot of information about videos. Great comparison tool. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
debebee Posted January 30, 2019 Share Posted January 30, 2019 i believe he means "visual comparison" of 2 videos Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jogs Posted January 30, 2019 Share Posted January 30, 2019 Professional video editors can do that but they require technical knowledge. If you want to compare two videos then the simple thing to do is run them together side by side. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Togijak Posted January 30, 2019 Author Share Posted January 30, 2019 1 hour ago, Jogs said: Professional video editors can do that but they require technical knowledge. If you want to compare two videos then the simple thing to do is run them together side by side. you are right, I get the hint to that tool but looks like I am to stupid (or not deep enough in the technical aspects of the video technology) for that tool. The only answers in two hours with the free version was again and again some incomprehensible error messages @teodz1984 no because it would not make sense to sit (for example) 2 hours in front of monitor after using a video converter or something like Ashampoo Video Optimizer Pro, unless there is an option that only shows serious optical differences @strotee maybe you would be right it there would be a option to compare 2 videos and second argument against that tool is that I never saw a information about bad frames etc in the output Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Togijak Posted January 30, 2019 Author Share Posted January 30, 2019 I found a working visual way (little bit complicated because both windows starting maximized) Quote VLC is able to do this very well without any kind of scripting or add-on. As far as I know however you can only play two files synchronously, not 3. To accomplish this simply open VLC and select Media>Open Multiple Files. Inside the multiple file windows select add to add the first file. After this click on the, "Show more options," checkbox followed by the, "Play another media synchronously," checkbox at the bottom of the window. Select browse next to, "Extra media," to add the second file. Hit play and the two media files will play simultaneously with a single control window. to have two different videos I used first and that is how you see the both videos synchronously Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
masterupc Posted January 30, 2019 Share Posted January 30, 2019 A 4k OLED/AMOLED Monitor/TV 😂 Quality is subjective but you can find some differences visually (still subjective) with the right tools (objective - expensive although). Good luck. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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