Andrew Kolakowski wrote:Feature is rather self explanatory.
You either encode faster or with better quality.
It has no direct correlation to x265. HW and x265 are quite different encoders.
It's not self-explanatory at all. Without documentation, "speed" could be referring to anything from how quickly the video starts playing to how quickly it downloads. Given the information I found, I believe it is referring to how quickly it renders, although I haven't had a chance to run any scientific tests. But even if that is the case, does "Optimize for speed" improve rendering time across the board? Or is it an optimization for specific source codecs, or for other specific attributes of the video, e.g. color, compression artifacts, audio? Does it only apply to Apple Silicon? How does checking this box differ from simply lowering the bit rate? Does it impact file size? And perhaps most importantly, how much IQ degradation can be expected, if any, and in what circumstances?
And lastly, it's absolutely correlated to h.265/HEVC. That may be the only thing that is actually self-explanatory, since the option doesn't appear for other codecs.
I think it's notable that the option is checked by default. So one would expect that if there is a loss of quality, it is negligible, but obviously the option to disable it exists for a reason.
No, you probably don’t need a calibrated, non-computer display.