A dynamically tiling X11 window manager that is written and configured in Haskell.
In a normal WM, you spend half your time aligning and searching for windows. XMonad makes work easier, by automating this.
mkvmerge -o "Jumanji.1995.1080p.BluRay.10bit.60fps.x265.HEVC-Top.mkv" \
--language 0:eng jumanji_60fps.hevc --language 0:eng audio.flac \
--track-name "0:HEVC 10bit 60fps" --track-name "0:FLAC 5.1"
x265 --input - --output jumanji_60fps.hevc \
--y4m --profile main10 --level 4.1 --crf 17 --preset slow \
--frame-threads 3 --pools "+" --no-sao --no-strong-intra-smoothing \
--deblock -1:-1 --aq-mode 3 --aq-strength 1.0 \
--psy-rd 2.0 --psy-rdoq 1.0 --rdoq-level 2 \
--qcomp 0.7 --no-open-gop --keyint 600 --min-keyint 60 \
--fps 60 --colorprim bt709 --transfer bt709 --colormatrix bt709 \
--range limited --master-display "G(13250,34500)B(7500,3000)R(34000,16000)WP(15635,16450)" \
--chromaloc 2 --hdr10
⚠️ 60fps will roughly double bitrate compared to 24fps for same CRF. Expect 12–18 Mbps.
The keyword ends with "he top." In the encoding community, "Top" usually refers to a release group known for specific high-end parameters, or it is a search tag indicating the "top of the line" settings: jumanji 1995 1080p 10bit bluray 60fps x265 he top
If you find a file labeled with these specs, look for a bitrate exceeding 8,000 kbps. Because the video is 60fps (double the usual frames), the file needs roughly double the bitrate to avoid pixelation during the heavy action sequences (like the crocodile or the stampede). mkvmerge -o "Jumanji