![]() So basically, if you go to, they’ll have rips for different movies and shows. You can buy a subscription through the mega app found on the iphone app store (so you’re billed through apple and it’s less scary than giving a random site your credit card info lmao) and as for androids I think mega has an app on there too. I personally pay the $5 a month membership for mega because it’s worth it imo. You can download stuff from both of those sites for free, but with mega, they have a 5GB file download limit unless you have a premium account. These ddl sites will have links to their movie/tv rips that are typically hosted on one of these two sites: google drive or mega.nz. The part of the guide you’d want to look at is where it says Direct Downloads Link (DDL) sites. I use it for finding sites for books, music, you name it. This is THE best guide for pirating I’ve ever seen. I would only do it if it’s your only option and you have a VPN or something. The download speed also varies depending on how many other people are seeding it. This means movie studios can find out you’re downloading their content and can send you a warning letter. Other people downloading the same torrent can see your IP address. Where can I download movies and shows?įirst off, I prefer direct downloading rather than torrenting stuff because it’s faster and with torrenting, there’s more of a risk. ![]() ✨ You can find my gifmaking 101 tutorial here and the rest of my tutorials here. Why screencaps of 4k movies can look weird and washed out and how to fix that.Making gifs as HQ as possible, including tips for picking out what to download when you have multiple options (not all 1080p rips of the same movie or tv episode are the same quality and I explain why).Here’s a little guide on this process, including my advice on from hardware/software settings worked on that and it showed on my screencaps, but soften/levels option doesn't have any effect on the screencaps it seems, so it's still dark.Finding high quality film/tv rips, saving the large files, and screencapping them are half the battle for gifmakers when setting out to make a gifset. I remember that changing brightness/contrast/etc. The things is, I need to do continuous screencaps from there through KMPlayer, right, and when I do that it still screencaps the dark video and not what I see. I've actually played up with the settings a little and changing the Video Renderer setting to Enhanced Video Renderer did the thing because the changed level I set up (input and output from 0-255 to 16-235 like you said) suddenly started working on the video (hence the other ones were too bright, but that's okay since I know now what to change up). Of course, then you'll have to go back the the normal settings to play other videos. You can adjust the players proc amp settings (Options -> Preferences -> Color Controls -> Hardware and Software) to compensate. MediaInfo might be able to tell you if the video is flagged. Either the video isn't flagged as full range (so the player doesn't know not to perform the usual contrast stretch) or it is flagged and the player isn't responding to the flag. There are two possible causes of this problem. So darks are too dark and crushed in the darkest areas, brights are too bright and crushed in the brightest areas. Your player is displaying it as if it was limited range YUV. That particular video is encoded as "full range" YUV where Y=0 is defined as black, Y=255 is defined as white. With this algorithm any Y values less than 16 also become RGB 0, and any Y values above 235 also become RGB 255. When converted to RGB that limited range is converted to full range RGB. ![]() Ie, Y=16 is full black, Y=235 if full white. The international standard is "limited range" YUV where Y (the greyscale image) ranges from 16 to 235. So the video has to be converted from YUV to RGB for you to see it. I don't think it's a graphic card's settings problem since it's only this video (and other videos from the same site) Most video is encoded as YUV.
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