Aside from decryption, MakeMKV is mostly just taking what can be dozens or even hundreds of smaller m2ts files that are in no particular order and putting them in one nice, tidy package. You see this in MakeMKV when you expand a title and choose the audio type and language and subtitle language. I'm not sure of the limit, but I'm pretty sure one exists.) and in many different codecs (such as MPEG-2, H.264, and VC-1 for video). ![]() The beauty of MKV is that it can handle more than one of the same kind of stream (For instance, I use 2 audio streams: Flac and DTS-MA. Besides making sure you have the chapters, you'll never need to fool with those so I won't dwell. I almost forgot chapters, so maybe 4 streams. Video containers contain 3 different kinds of streams (or tracks, but everyone calls them streams): video, audio, and subtitles - usually in that order. ![]() Something that allows you to store multiple different kinds of something else in an organized way. When talking about a video file you need to think of it as a container - a box or jar or maybe a filing cabinet. ![]() I may be beating a dead horse, but I want to take this opportunity to further explain the 'container'.
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