![]() ![]() The only thing you really want to do here is to compensate for interlaced or grainy, compressed looking video. Picture SettingsĬlick on the Picture Settings button to launch a separate window. If you want to hook your iPod Video up to your TV, then you should check out the TuneView. If you don’t have the money for an Apple TV, there’s this fantastic iPod video dock called the Keyspan TuneView. This is fine and isn’t something to worry about.īut if you plan on watching this video on your TV with an Apple TV or an iPod Video dock, then you should keep the video size big. For wide-screen content, the height will be a lower number. ![]() If your video source is 3:4 (full-screen), the height will be 240. Handbrake will auto-adjust the height to match the width. Turn on the “Keep aspect ratio button” and decrease the Width until it says 320. If you don’t plan on watching your ripped DVDs on anything else, then you can mess around with the settings. Your iPod really only wants video files that are 320 pixels wide by 240 wide. If you really want to experiment with all the Handbrake settings, then check out a tutorial we wrote for the old version of Handbrake before they integrated the Presets feature. Pick a higher number, like 900 kbps, if quality is more important to you than a smaller file size. 500 kbps will give you a nice high quality file that will work on both big (HDTVs) and small screens (iPod/iPhone) and won’t take up a ton of hard drive space, but it will look slightly compressed. If you plan on watching your converted file on your iPod, iPad, iPhone or even Apple TV, then we suggest you select “ Universal” from the Apple preset section and drop the average bitrate down to somewhere between 500-900 kbps. ![]() Just select a preset and Handbrake will automatically fill in all the settings for you. Handbrake has preset settings for a variety of popular devices like the iPod, iPad, iPhone, Apple TV, Xbox, Sony PSP, and many more. On average, you need about 1 GB per full-length movie. Try to pick a location that has sufficient disk space to store the ripped file. File Destination: You can name your file and choose its destination using this box. ![]()
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