

You also need to decide what to do with the original DTS track. This is on par with what commercial DVDs use. Generally, I would select 448 kbit as the bitrate for new Dolby Digital tracks. DTS tracks are normally encoded at either 768 kbit or 1536 kbit, whereas AC3 tracks have a maximum bitrate of 640 kbit. The higher the value, the better the quality, but also the bigger the file. If you, however, choose to convert the track to Dolby Digital, you need to decide what bitrate you want the new Dolby Digital track to be encoded at. If you choose to remove the track, it is simply stripped out of the file (unless it is the only audio track in the file). You can either remove them completely from the file without conversion ("Remove track"), or you can convert them to AC3 (Dolby Digital) tracks, which your PopCorn Hour can process internally, giving you sound where you before had none.

First of all, you need to decide what to do with DTS tracks.
