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It has a bundle of other features that makes it an all in one program. Vuze! I believe Vuze is better than Handbreak, Double Twist and all the rest because of it simplicity to converting to my EVO (two EVO household). I just don't want any of you to getting into something more than they can handle. But, please take notice and read everything before you do anything (I'm speaking to the beginners, first timers, noobs, noobies, rookies, and bench warmers). I have a very easy solution that you've all been waiting for. That's just because I don't know how ofter I will check up on the replies and I didn't want anyone to be left behind. I read all the post and I couldn't let you guys keep suffering. Make sure files are named so that they list in the correct order if you use cat like the example below to pipe your input I have a quad processor, so I'm using 4 threads FFMPEG is overly cautious in avoiding clipping when downmixing audio, that's why the audio gain setting is cranked way up. Same resolution as source (720x480, 32x27 pixel aspect ratio, 16:9 display aspect ratio) (High action films can be quite a bit bigger though) target a little under 1G for 2 hr movie. highest quality possible while staying within profile and acceptable bitratea (i.e. Bitstream has the telecine flag set (i.e. US film format squeezed into a 16:9 frame) It's the same MPEG2 video stream as what is on the DVD) Here's a working CLI example of encoding of DVD content that has been ripped and dumped into MPEG-PS files. FFMPEG is free, and most the the programs listed are just front ends to FFMPEG anyway. You don't need any fancy software to do this. If you are encoding using h264 and you are getting errors about how it's not able to play the video this is probably your problem. These little phones don't have the processing power to handle anything more than baseline profile. (avi? seriously? are you out of your mind?) h264 + aac in an mp4 container will give the best quality for the bitrate. Most of you problems are that you are encoding using unsupported profiles. There are limits, but the decoder is pretty flexible in that regard. Most of the problems listed in in this thread don't have much to do with bitrate or frame size. Instead all I see is the blind leading the blind. It's featured as a link in the FAQ, so I thought I might find more detailed specs here than the sparse documentation I've been able to find so far.