Apple Power Mac G5 User Manual

Page 25

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Video encoding
Video encoding is the most time-consuming part of burning a DVD. Encoding is the
process by which DV, the format generated by most standard digital video cameras,
is translated—or encoded—into MPEG-2, the format used for high-quality television
display by consumer DVD players.

Apple tested the Power Mac G5 systems running Compressor 1.1, Apple’s professional-
level encoding software. The time it took each system to encode a five-minute DV clip
was measured using the high-quality MPEG-2 encoding setting.

The dual 2GHz and dual 1.8GHz Power Mac G5 systems encoded the DV clip 113% and

99% faster, respectively, than the 3.2GHz Pentium 4–based system, and 46% and 37%

faster, respectively, than the dual 3.2GHz Xeon-based system.

1

Power Mac G5 systems were tested using Compressor 1.1. The Dell Dimension XPS, Alienware Aurora, and Dell Precision
650 were tested using Canopus ProCoder 1.5.

Power Mac G5

Dual 2GHz PowerPC G5

Power Mac G5

Dual 1.8GHz PowerPC G5

Dell Dimension XPS

3.2GHz Pentium 4

Power Mac G5

1.6GHz PowerPC G5

19% faster

Dell Precision 650

Dual 3.2GHz Xeon

46% faster

Alienware Aurora

2.2GHz AMD Athlon 64 FX-51

12% faster

High-quality MPEG-2 encoding

Percent faster than Pentium 4

Baseline

113% faster

99% faster

25

Technology and
Performance Overview
Power Mac G5

MPEG-2 Encoding Results

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