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cd opencv-2.4. I will now keep two copies of each video, a single 480p x264 for streaming to my tablet, and a 1080p or higher copy in x265 for my desktops. According to one of the users that tested it on Ubuntu 14.04, you’ll need to use WITHFFMPEGOFF. It did take a lot longer to convert than I'm used to but maybe now I can reclaim some space on my BTRFS RAID 10 NFS. Reducing this to 25%-50% means that not only will these files be able to fit more easily onto your mobile devices, but they will be able to stream there a lot more quickly and cheaply, although we will probably just increase resolutions instead. As it stands, 1 out of every 3 bits flowing on the internet is video, mostly in the form of Netflix and Porn. This could already be having a massive effect on internet based video. Must have been looking at the wrong terminal. I was wrong that the problem also effected my Raspberry Pi installation. By renaming the file (just in case), FFMpeg now loads the correct library from /usr/lib/x8664-linux-gnu. H265 can produce amazingly small filesizes with a little reduction in quality, or halve the filesize with no detectable change in quality. Possibly left over from many upgrades since Ubuntu 14.04. Sudo apt-get install vlc-plugin-libde265 -y Sudo apt-add-repository ppa:strukturag/libde265 -y We will need to run these commands to be able to play any h265 videos.
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Unfortunately, the default VLC for Ubuntu 14.04 (2.1.5 Rincewind), does not appear to have h265 support. One can specify settings to override the defaults for improving speed/compression/quality, but that is beyond the scope of this post.
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