User Manual

Chapter 5 Custom settings and output formats 100
Open and closed GOPs
Open GOPs are most ecient because they allow an extra B-frame in the GOP pattern. Open
GOPs start with a B-frame that is able to look at the last P-frame from the preceding GOP as well
as the rst I-frame of its own GOP.
Open GOP
(IBBP, 15 frames)
:06 :07 :08 :09 :10 :11 :12 :13 :14 :15 :16 :17 :18 :19 :20 :21:04 :05:03
I B B P B B P B B P B B P B B IB BP
Closed GOP
(IBBP, 15 frames)
:09
:06 :07 :08 :10 :11 :12 :13 :14 :15 :16 :17 :18:04 :05
P B B P B P B P B PI B BBB
By denition, closed GOPs cannot contain any frame that refers to a frame in the previous or next
GOP. In contrast, open GOPs begin with one or more B-frames that reference the last P-frame of
the previous GOP. Closed GOPs created by Compressor always begin with an I-frame.
Open GOPs generally provide slightly better compression than do closed GOPs of the same
structure and size. The illustration above shows that a closed GOP contains one more P-frame
than does an open GOP of the same length. Because P-frames generally require more bits than
do B-frames, the open GOP achieves slightly better compression.
There are limitations to using open GOPs for DVD-Video discs that are created using a DVD
authoring application. One limitation is that only closed GOPs are permitted within MPEG-2
streams that will be used for mixed-angle or multi-angle DVDs.
The other limitation is that DVD chapter markers can be set only at the beginning of a closed
GOP. The best time to dene chapter markers is before doing MPEG-2 transcoding. For example,
if you specify your chapter markers in Final Cut Pro, you can set Compressor to do MPEG-2
transcoding with open GOPs. Compressor then forces a closed GOP to begin only at the specied
chapter markers and makes all other GOPs open. You can also accomplish this by specifying
“forced I-frames in the Compressor Preview window and giving them a chapter name to be used
by a DVD authoring application.
However, if you want to specify chapter markers at any GOP boundary after your video has been
transcoded in the MPEG-2 format, you should use only closed GOPs. This freedom is limited, as it
allows you to set chapter markers only at GOP boundaries, rather than at any video frame.
AIFF les
AIFF overview
The Audio Interchange File Format (AIFF) was developed by Apple for storing high-quality audio.
The format was intended for DVD or CD authoring and is now one of the most commonly used
audio le formats for the Mac OS.
Note: Choose the AIFF option from the File Format pop-up menu only if you need to create
a specialized AIFF le. If you’re creating a standard AIFF le, choose the Common Audio
Formats option.