I don't know if this is what is giving HB the problem, just seems odd that this MKV would have three seemingly empty streams. Any MKV experts have out there have a clue into what's going on here?
Well, I ran that tool in Crossover and from what I see, they appear to be fonts. I am assuming these are for some sort of embedded subtitling? This movie has no hard subtitles that I have ever seen.
When I did the original rip and encode, I did not embed fonts into the MKV (didn't even know this was possible). Is it possible the old MKV encoder I used "stamped" the video with some sort of watermark? Or maybe they were for a scene where the location in the movie is displayed? I'm lost and a complete noob at this stuff.
nightstrm wrote:Sorry, going to play devil's advocate here...
How would you have created a MKV file and not know what the contents of it are?
Not 100% certain what you're implying here, but am fairly sure and find it fairly presumptious. As I stated in my earlier post, I'm no expert when it comes to this stuff. Last year, I ripped most of my Blu-Ray disks on my Windows box and converted them to MKVs following a guide I found on videohelp.com. I really haven't the foggiest idea how there are fonts embedded in this file, nor do I even know why you would even need them. I only noticed the extra attachments when I compared the log to a known successful one.
What I do know, is I followed TedJ's sage advice on removing the attachments and was able to successfully use Handbrake to encode an Apple TV compatible version overnight. Thanks, Ted.