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Overview
Introduction
System Requirements
Quick Start
Interface
Menu Bar
Toolbar
List of Opened Files
Devices Mode
Advanced Mode
Favorites Mode
Save To
Convert Button
Join Button
Burn Button
Seek Slider
Preview Area
Controls
Edit Video Buttons
Status Bar
Working
Adding Files
Adding Online Video
Prevewing Files
Converting in Devices Mode
Converting in Advanced Mode
Converting in Favorites Mode
Choosing File Quality and Size
Choosing Fragment to Convert
Cropping Video
Rotating Video
Adjusting Video
Adding Watermark
Converting Video Files
Converting Audio Files
Extracting Audio
Joining Files
Converting Files to Several Formats
Creating Photo Gallery
Ripping DVD
Burning Files to DVD
Converting for iPod
Converting for PSP
Converting for Zune
Converting for PDA
Closing Application on Converting
Specifying Application Preferences
If You Cannot Open a File
Format Reference
3GPP
3GPP2
ASF
AVI
DAT (VCD, SVCD)
FLV
IFO
M2T
MOD
MOV
MPEG (DVD, VCD, SVCD)
MPEG4
MTS
MKV
RealMedia
VOB
VRO
WMV
AAC
FLAC
Monkey's Audio
MP3
OGG
WAV
WMA
Activation
Activate Movavi Video Converter
Automatic (Online) Activation of Movavi Video Converter
Manual (Offline) Activation of Movavi Video Converter
Copyright and License
Appendix
Version History
Technical Support
Movavi Video Converter :: Format Reference :: MPEG4

MPEG is a short for Moving Picture Experts Group

MPEG-4 is designed to deliver DVD (MPEG-2) quality video at lower data rates and smaller file sizes. While audio and video are at the core of the MPEG-4 specification, MPEG-4 can also support 3D objects, sprites, text and other media types. MPEG-4 allows the use of different encoding methods, for instance a keyframe can be encoded using ICT or Wavelets resulting in different output qualities.
MPEG-4 is now used in new iPod. Movavi Video Converter lets you easily convert any of your video files to MPEG-4 format to import them to the new iPod.

H.264 H.264 is the next-generation video compression technology in the MPEG-4 standard, also known as MPEG-4 Part 10. H.264 can match the best possible MPEG-2 quality at up to half the data rate. H.264 also delivers excellent video quality across the entire bandwidth spectrum — from 3G to HD and everything in between (from 40 Kbps to upwards of 10 Mbps).
MPEG-2 content at 1920x1080 traditionally runs at 12-20 Mbps, while H.264 can deliver 1920x1080 content at 7-8 Mbps at the same or better quality. H.264 provides DVD quality at about half the data rate of MPEG-2. Because of this efficiency, H.264, an ISO standard, stands to be the likely successor to MPEG-2 in the professional media industry.



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