The Dr. DivX File page has three basic parts. There is the ever-present preview window on the right hand side of the page. There is also a basic or an advanced window on the left hand side. You can switch between basic or advanced using the tabs at the top of the window.
Before delving into those parts, take a look at the buttons labeled Encode and Save Encode Settings along the bottom of the File page.
The ominous Encode button has already been mentioned a couple times. Once you've picked an input file and tweaked all the options, press the Encode button to queue up your video for batch processing. When you press encode, you'll be whisked over to the Batch page. Don't worry; you can always flip back and forth between the File page and the Batch page using the buttons on the toolbar near the top of the page.
The Save Encode Settings button is for the Custom Profile feature. Not surprisingly, the button will allow you to save your encoding settings. Dr. DivX will show you a drop-down list of all the other custom profiles you've created. You can either replace an existing profile or type in a new name.

The Preview window has no title and it doesn't play videos, but it will display frames from the input file. This will give you some idea of how the output video will appear once it's been cropped and scaled. The preview will be cropped according to the settings found in the Advanced window.
It can take a few minutes for the doctor to figure out where all the frames are in your video file. While performing the necessary calculations, Dr. DivX will display a progress bar labeled Analysis above the preview window. When the analysis is complete, the preview picture will be displayed.
Dr. DivX will automatically choose a Title based on the name of your input file. The title will be used as the name of the output file created by Dr. DivX. You can use any name you'd like as long as it's a valid file name. The doctor always adds a .divx file extension.
Next to the title is a button to choose the output folder. Click on this button to select the destination folder for the output file. If you don't make a choice, Dr. DivX will use the output folder specified on the Preferences page. See the Preferences section for more details.
Theoretically, Dr. DivX can embed some notes in the output file so you can classify videos by different type or genre. However, you might notice that these options are currently grayed out. You can't change them. Someday this feature will be available, but for now, you'll have to wait. Don't worry; these settings are just your own personal notes. Your choices here make no difference to the doctor at all. You can safely skip over these options.
There are five preview controls under the preview display. Starting from the left, you'll find a skip backward button which jumps the video back a few seconds. Next there is the slow motion forward button which moves the video forward just one frame at a time each time you click on it. If you hold the button down, the video will advance in slow motion. To the right of that is the skip forward button which jumps the video forward by a few seconds.
The horizontal slider may be dragged left or right to quickly move through the video. Unfortunately, the preview slider may not work for all videos. Dr. DivX doesn't give any indication that the slider isn't working. However, if it doesn't respond when you try to drag it around, then it's not working. Don't be alarmed.
Finally, on the far right is the full size preview button. Press this button to open a new window which displays frames at full size. The full size preview controls work exactly like the normal preview controls, although you'll notice the addition of a check box labeled Free. If you check the Free option, you can expand the preview window and adjust the aspect in case you want a closer look.
Under the preview display, you'll find some details about the video file that will be created although it can take a few minutes for the doctor to figure out the preview information. While performing the necessary calculations, Dr. DivX will display a progress bar labeled Analysis above the preview window. When the analysis is complete, the preview information will be displayed.
The preview information includes the length of the video and the target resolution in pixels. The preview information also provides estimates for the resulting file size and the final frame rate. You'll find that audio bitrate and the video codec bitrate have the greatest affect on the resulting file size. Typical files will be 90% video and 10% audio so between the two, the video codec bitrate is the dominate factor.
By adjusting the audio bitrate and the video codec bitrate, you can trade off quality for smaller file sizes. Lower bitrates make smaller files but also don't look or sound as good. Make your bitrate selection in the Advanced window under the Audio tab and the Codec tab.
In practical use, audio bitrates over 128 kbps sound good and video codec bitrates over 1300 kbps look clear even on big screen TVs. You'll certainly find them better looking than your average television broadcast anyway. If you are encoding files for small screens like PDAs or phones, you may want to run the audio bitrate down to 64 kbps and the video down to 150 kbps. The result looks pretty decent on 3 inch displays and an hour of video is only slightly more than 100 Meg in size.

Half of the File page is devoted to either the Basic or Advanced options window. Use the tabs at the top of the window to flip between the two. If you ask the doctor to perform the same job every time, you can usually create a custom profile that is easily invoked from the Basic window. That should spare you from having to venture into the Advanced options very often.
You can drag and drop a file almost anywhere near the Input file list box. You can also click on the Open button or press Ctrl-O on your keyboard to browse for the input file you want.
Despite the way it looks, the doctor only works on one file at a time except for multipart VOB files (see below). Just drop one file at a time into Dr. DivX, choose your options, press the Encode button, and only then move on to the next patient.
Every time you open an input file, Dr. DivX will setup the default encoding settings that you selected on the Preferences page. If you have a favorite recipe of encoding settings, use the Save Encode Settings feature to save yourself some typing.
Sometimes video files are broken into multiple parts. This is often the case with VOB files (Video Object files) that you find on DVDs. Dr. DivX is trained to handle multi-part VOBs. All you need do is select all the parts. Use the Open button, browse for the VOB files, and then select all of them. The doctor will put them in the right order based on the file names. Usually the names are something like VTS_01_1.VOB followed by VTS_01_2.VOB and so on.
There's no need to throw in other files like VTS_01_0.IFO. The doctor only knows how to deal with VOB files.
Some video files, like VOBs, can include multiple audio tracks. Just like snazzy DVDs, DivX also allows for multiple audio tracks, so the doctor lets you choose which audio tracks should be included in the output file. If you are not bilingual or you are space conscious then you probably only want one audio track. Either way, just check off the tracks you want included in the output file.
To help you figure out what language option to set for each audio track, Dr. DivX provides some playback controls you can use to preview the selected audio. Simply press the play button to hear some of the track. You can also jump forward or backward a few seconds if you need to skip around a bit.
Next to the Audio Track(s) list, there is a Select button which allows you to specify the order which the audio tracks will be included in the output file.
As you check off each track on the Select Tracks list, you can also specify the track language and caption code from the drop down lists near the bottom of the window. Your choices here don't really matter as far as the doctor is concerned, but when later decide to playback your DivX file, you'll be able to tell which track you want to listen to based on the choices you make here.
[This might sound familiar.]
Some video files, like VOBs, can include multiple subtitle tracks. DivX also allows for multiple subtitle tracks, so the doctor lets you choose which subtitle tracks should be included in the output file. If you are space conscious then you probably don't want any subtitles. Either way, just check off the tracks you want included in the output file.
The rewind, play, stop and fast forward buttons on the Subtitle Track Selection page are always grayed out. They don't do anything. They are decorative.
Next to the Subtitle Track(s) list, there is a Select button which allows you to specify the order which the subtitle tracks will be included in the output file.
As you check off each track on the Select Tracks list, you can also specify the track language and caption code from the drop down lists near the bottom of the window. Just like the audio tracks, your choices for the subtitle tracks don't really matter, but when you later decide to playback your DivX file, you'll be able to tell which subtitles you want to read based on the choices you make here.

As the DivX codec grew into a popular standard, hardware manufactures realized its potential in the consumer market and developed devices claiming to be DivX Compatible.
In truth, these players would typically support only some versions of DivX and even then only limited features from those versions. The capabilities of hardware devices claiming DivX compatibility varied so widely that it became a hit-and-miss affair attempting to encode DivX video that could be played consistently well on all of them. That's why DivXNetworks designed a system of profiles for DivX Certified devices.
By selecting one of the four available profile modes, you instruct Dr. DivX to constrain to the minimum capabilities of devices certified for that profile. Encoder features unsupported by any given profile will be automatically disabled and the encoder will produce only video streams suitable for the certified device.
If you are particularly interested in the technical differences between the minimum requirements of the standard profiles, you'll find all the gory details in the following four sub-sections.

The Quality setting provides an easy pick for rushed users. Save yourself a bunch of reading by simply choosing Balanced quality and press the Encode button. Now you can skip ahead to chapter 3.
Still here? You may have noticed that Dr. DivX chose a set of advanced encoding options that produced a decent quality video in a reasonable amount of time. It's not the best that DivX can do, but you won't lament about wasting your youth watching a progress bar labeled, encoding.
Would you rather get the best possible picture and you don't care about how long it takes? Move all the way down the options to the Insane Quality setting. On the other hand, if you are really pressed for time, set the quality to Fastest and Dr. DivX will work as quickly as possible. The resulting video may not look stellar, but you'll get it quick.
With 6 levels of quality to choose from, you can test exactly how patient you are. If you want it bad, you'll get it bad and the worse you want it, the worse you'll get it.
You may have realized by now that most video files are not small. Movies are huge chunks of data compared to almost everything else on your computer. In fact, this user guide is about a thousand times smaller than your typical film.
Storing lots of DivX files may be a challenge for you, so Dr. DivX provides the file size constraint to help you out. Just tell the doctor the maximum size you can tolerate and Dr. DivX will choose the right mix of settings to get the best quality video possible without exceeding your size limit. This is particularly handy if you are trying to squeeze a movie on to a 128 Meg memory card or if you'd like to burn a two hour film onto a 700 Meg CD.
Someday, Dr. DivX will allow you to split your videos into multiple files. You see, some folks would like to store long movies on CDs but they find the quality is a tad disappointing if the entire film is limited to 700 Meg. Output file splitting is just what they need. For example, most feature length movies can be divided into 2 files of less than 700 Meg which can then be burned onto two CDs. Unfortunately, this feature is not currently implemented in Dr. DivX so the file count is always 1 and you can't change it.

If you fancy yourself a video connoisseur, then simply picking from a pile of default options will never suffice. That's why Dr. DivX features custom profiles. Whip up your favorite recipe of advanced settings and then use the Save Encode Settings button to create your own custom profile. The doctor will store your settings in the Profile Folder. Then you can apply them over and over again with just a few mouse clicks
Under the Advanced tab you'll find even more tabs that divide the settings into four sub-groups called Video presets, Pre-processing, Codec, and Audio.

You can waste away your years tinkering with all the settings under the Advanced tab, but Dr. DivX trys to simply things for you. Stick with the Video presets tab and just move the slider left or right until you find the settings you'd like. The doctor tries to make a tradeoff between speed and quality depending on where you place the slider. There's a good chance one of the many presets will be adequate for your needs.
If the presets don't look tempting enough for you, then uncheck the Use presets checkbox and proceed on to the other three advanced tabs. You are sure to find more settings then you'd care to look at.
The Pre-Processing options are split into three boxes named Crop, Resolution and Image Processing.

The Crop box does not refer to vegetables. It's a technical term that folks use when they cut up pictures. If you check the Enabled box, you can shave unwanted borders off your input video. There are many reasons why you might want to trim the picture down a bit. For example, you may be planning to watch the output video on a tiny cell phone with a square display. In that case, you could trim some columns of pixels off the left and right so you end up with something that fills the screen of your phone.
It's also quite common to see letter boxed videos that include black borders along the top and bottom of every frame. Dr. DivX will happily encode the black borders that appear in the original source. However, that just makes your output file larger and doesn't really enhance your viewing pleasure. You are probably better off trimming down the top and bottom.
Videos with borders are so common that Dr. DivX includes an Automatic Crop option that does the math for you. Instead of manually counting the number of pixels you need to crop, just check the automatic button. The doctor will figure out where the black borders are and dutifully trim them out.
You'll find the automatic setting works great most of the time, but keep an eye on the results in the preview window. Sometimes videos don't provide a sharp break between the border and the picture. If the video contains pictures that kind of fade into the border, Dr. DivX will have a hard time automatically finding the best place to crop. You may have to manually adjust the crop settings to ensure you've eliminated every row of black pixels.
What's the big deal? Why worry about a few rows? In fact, why not just leave all black borders exactly where they are? The answer is rooted in the way video compression algorithms work. The DivX codec achieves miraculous compression ratios by eliminating tiny details that you don't notice. It turns out that encoding thin black lines is tough. Your output files will be measurably larger and/or your picture quality will be noticeably worse if you keep borders on every frame.

As if pounding your videos into different resolutions isn't enough, Dr. DivX offers a few advanced image processing options for you. The Image Processing box really dives deep in to the voodoo of video compression. Don't worry; the following sections describe these options in fairly plain language.
The noise reduction filter attempts to smooth out grainy images. This usually makes it easy to compress videos but it can also make the images appear flat. Dr. DivX can perform various degrees of noise reduction from Light to Extreme or you can just leave the option Off.
When encoding video, Dr. DivX looks at differences in small blocks of pixels and basically rounds them off to a set of predefined thresholds. This process is called Quantization and it is a key step in achieving the high compression ratios that DivX delivers.
There are two sets of Quantization thresholds available. The old-timers may prefer the original H.263 collection. However, the first H.263 quantization values were later optimized and Dr. DivX recommends you try the H.263 Optimized set.
Interlaced video attempts to make motion appear smoother by alternating between two frames on every other line of a display. Usually this appears like jagged edges when you slow the video down and look at one frame at a time. At full-speed on a standard television, the video will look pretty good so Dr. DivX will create interlaced videos if you'd like. However, for high definition televisions and computer monitors you'll want to stick with the Progressive Output setting which does not interlace frames.
Psychovisual Enhancements is based on visual property of Just Noticeable Difference (JND). When Psychovisual Enhancements is not off, Dr. DivX will analyze each frame and concentrate on areas that are more noticeable to the human eye. These are areas of high contrast, while large areas of low contrast are averaged out and the number of colors is reduced. Usually, this results in smaller file sizes and an overall increase in visual quality of the movie. It also means that the encoding process will take a bit longer.
Other than off, there are two settings available for Psychovisual Enhancements. Shaping attempts to enhance fine details in the texture and mask differences between the source and encoded video in complex textures, which make them much less noticeable. In other words, it shapes the texture based on certain parameters.
Masking uses a slightly different algorithm, whereby each block in the frame and the surrounding blocks are analyzed such that the psychovisual enhancement introduces minimal artifacts.
While it's a matter of personal choice, generally shaping produces better results in almost all circumstances. Masking may be more visually pleasing for anime videos.

Except around New Year's Eve, resolution refers to the number of pixels that are used to make each frame of your video. The resolution and aspect ratio together determine the picture size. The whole thing is particularly confusing because not all pixels are square.
It will be easier to understand if you consider an example like a DVD movie. Please keep in mind that decrypting movies from DVDs is illegal in the U.S.A., even if you own the disc. However, suppose your wedding video was shot by Francis Ford Coppola and burned on to an anamorphic wide screen DVD years ago. Now you want to convert that video to a DivX file.
On your television, the film may appear in a dramatic 2.35:1 aspect ratio with black borders on the top and bottom. Like most DVDs, you'd find resolution of the video file is 720x480 pixels. Since the film is anamorphic, your DVD player knows to stretch the video horizontally before you see it. So if the DVD knows that the pixels are supposed to be about 1.57 times wider than they are tall, the end result will be a widescreen picture with a 2.35:1 aspect ratio.
Unfortunately, it's not that simple. If you look at the video file on the DVD, you'd see that it claims the pixels are 1.18 times wider than they are tall. Then, you'll notice that there are 60 rows of black pixels across the top and bottom of every frame. Yes, it's crazy, but there are actually just 360 rows of pixels that make up each frame. Once the DVD player stretches the picture horizontally by 1.18 and you account for 120 rows of black pixels, you end up with frames that appear to be about 2.35:1 which is what Mr. Coppola had in mind all along.
Sadly, things are even more complicated than that. Not all videos will have borders exactly 60 pixel high. Some will be 55 on top and 65 on the bottom. Some will have 5 to 10 columns of black pixels on the sides. You just never know what you'll find.
The automatic cropping feature should make it easy to get rid of the borders, where ever they are. Just be careful with the resulting resolution. Dr. DivX only makes videos with square pixels so the aspect ratio will be defined by the resolution you choose. Most of the time, for 2.35:1 films, you'll want to crop the borders and resize the video to 720x304 pixels. High Definition Television is usually 16:9, so resize those videos to 720x400. Standard Television is 4:3, so 640x480 is a good size in that case.
If you are resizing your videos, Dr. DivX gives you several resizing filters to choose from. It turns out that resizing a digital picture can be accomplished many different ways. For example, to cut a picture in half, you could just remove every other pixel. That's actually a rather crude technique and the results are very satisfying. What you'd rather do is take some kind of average between neighboring pixels and use that instead. Lots of mathematicians like Cornelius Lanczos spend countless hours trying to find a better way to resize pictures. Each algorithm has different tradeoffs between things like quality and encoding speed. You can try some experiments to find your favorite, or just settle for default option.

The Codec tab under the Advanced tab is divided into three areas. They are Codec Performance, Rate Control, and Frame Control described in the following sub-sections.
The options available for Codec Performance are the same as the Quality options on the Basic page. Flip back to the Quality section of the User Guide to jog your memory.

Adjusting the Rate Control setting begins with choosing a Mode. Would you like 1 pass or 2 passes? The answer may depend on how much time you have. The 1 pass option works just fine, but if you insist on getting the best possible picture quality, then tell the doctor to make 2 passes through your input file. That ensures that Dr. DivX doesn't miss any opportunity to optimize the picture quality but it also means the whole process will take about twice as long.
After you flip a coin to decide how many passes to make, you need to choose a maximum Bitrate. The higher the bitrate, the better the picture but it also makes for larger file sizes. You have to make the tradeoff. In practical use, video codec bitrates over 1300 kbps look clear even on big screen TVs. You'll certainly find them better looking than your average television broadcast anyway. If you are encoding files for small screens like PDAs or phones with only 320 pixels across, you may want to run the video down to 130 kbps. The result looks pretty decent on 3 inch displays and an hour of video is only slightly more than 100 Meg in size.
If quality is more important to you than file size, then try out the 1-pass quality-based mode. Using this option you get to pick a target quantizer. Sound nifty? The quantizer is just a number between 1 and 31. Opting for a lower number will give you better picture quality but you'll also get larger files. Larger numbers reduce the file size but give you worse quality.
In practice, a quantizer of 4 is good quality with reasonable file size. You may want to move it down to 3, but anything less than that won't make much visible difference for most people.

The Frame Control box will allow you tinker with key frames and rates. Each setting is explained in the following sub-sections.
While many of the settings available under the Advanced Codec tab will simply affect picture quality, the Bidirectional setting can affect compatibility so this is an important one to consider.
Without going into too much detail about how video compression works, you should understand that the output file is basically a mixture of partial images with a few complete pictures sprinkled around (keyframes). DivX will start with a complete picture then progressively apply changes to make the picture move. Every once in a while, a new, complete picture is displayed and the process starts over again.
Turning the Bidirectional setting off, reduces the number of complete pictures that a DivX player has to track while displaying your video. Changing the setting to Adaptive Single Consecutive, makes DivX players remember more pictures at one time.
The catch is, not all players are capable enough to handle Adaptive Single Consecutive encoded videos. Particularly, small devices like phones may have trouble playing those videos. However, any devices that are DivX certified for the Portable profile or better, will be able to handle those videos with no problem.
You certainly want to use Adaptive Single Consecutive if your DivX player can handle it. Most can and it will provide significantly better picture quality in almost every case.
Fundamentally, video compression is achieved by not including every frame from the original video. Only a few key frames are included in the compressed video. The DivX player creates the frames in between by incrementally applying the necessary differences. Dr. DivX tries to figure out the best place for keyframes and will try to go as long as possible without using keyframes. This gives the highest compression but it's also a lot of work for the DivX player. The Max Keyframe Interval allows you to limit how long Dr. DivX will go without a keyframe.
If you are experimenting with low-bitrate encoding, you may want to increase the Max Keyframe Interval to improve the over-all quality assuming your player can handle it.
The Framerate setting controls how many frames per. second will be displayed while your video is playing. The exact numbers available for you to choose from will be dependent on the framerate of your original video, but you'll usually have two options that amount to full-rate or half-rate. Typically, you'll want the highest framerate possible. However, if you are making videos for small, portable, slow devices like PDAs or cell phones, you may want to drop the framerate to make sure that the player will be able to keep up. The result might not look as smooth but at least it will play.

Each audio track can be encoding using different quality settings. For example, you may want the main audio to use a high bitrate for the best quality. At the same time, you could use a low bitrate for the director's commentary track to reduce the overall file size.
Select each track, one at a time, from the drop down list. Choose the encoding settings you want to use for the selected track. Most of the settings are fairly obvious although for MP3 files, you have a choice between CBR or ABR mode.
In Constant Bitrate (CBR) mode, the bitrate will be the same for the whole file. It means that each part of the audio will use the same number of bits. As a result, complex parts of the music will be of a lower quality than the easiest ones. The main advantage is that the final size won't change and can be accurately predicted.
In Average Bitrate (ABR) the encoder will maintain an average bitrate while using higher bitrates for the parts of your music that need more bits. The result will be of higher quality than CBR encoding but the average file size will remain predictable, so this mode is highly recommended over CBR. Unfortunately, not all players support ABR mode during playback.
Near the bottom of the Advanced Audio tab, there is a check box to encode all selected tracks with these settings. You may find this option handy if you are converting a video file with lots of tracks.