Forum Replies Created

Page 4 of 23
  • George Socka

    July 2, 2009 at 5:24 am in reply to: How to encode for You Tube?

    My bit rate slider – CS3, goes to 20 which is 20 megabits per second. A standard definition DVD is about 5 – 7 megabits per second. HDV is 25 megabits per second. Sony EX is 35 megabits per second. To my humble eye, 2 – 3 megabits per second looks good for a talking head, nedium motion scene. 9 minutes of HDV is 2 gigabytes. 9 miutes at my rate is 140 megabytes.

    I think that standard def widescreen uprezzed to 1280×720 by AME looks pretty darn god, especially considering that youtube is going to squish it down again anyway.

    George Socka
    BeachDigital
    http://www.beachdigital.com

  • George Socka

    July 1, 2009 at 1:55 am in reply to: bring out the big guns…

    split the long clip into several smaller ones on the timeline. Preview as often as required until it is all done. save the individual preview files. They will be in the format of teh project settings. render the audio only from teh opriginal files. create a new project and use the video from teh preview files with teh rendered audio.

    Klugy but may be the only plan B you have

    George Socka
    BeachDigital
    http://www.beachdigital.com

  • George Socka

    July 1, 2009 at 1:40 am in reply to: XDCAM EX footage 1080p30 equivalent to 1080i60?

    A little Canon HF200 seems to say that its 1080p30 is captured as 1080i60 anyway. Certainly the images look good in a EX(HQ) 1080p project. The avchd files are going thru avisynth because CS3 does not support avchd, and everything needs rendering.

    George Socka
    BeachDigital
    http://www.beachdigital.com

  • George Socka

    July 1, 2009 at 1:26 am in reply to: How to encode for You Tube?

    My recipe is:

    Adobe media encoder from PPro CS3. h264 format, ntsc 1280×720 about 2 mbps CBR ( VBR takes too long and the issue is not about trying to make the file small enough to fit on a DVD) An 8 minute clip became a 140 mb mp4 file. took almost an hour to upload at night.

    Example:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sHAqknm2qOg

    This was shot in HD, edited in SD for a DVD based presentation, and then up-rezzed from the timline of the same widescreen DV PPro project used for the DVD. simply by select the 1280×720 preset. looks pretty good I think. I believe the resulting file creaed by youtube is about 32 mb when playing teh HD version so I am not sure that encoding to h264 at a higher bit rate would be useful but woudl take longer to encode and uplaod.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TenCq3L9BMo

    was encoded at 6 mbps from a similar widescreen DV project and has a bit richer color. This 2:20 clip became a h264 export of 110 mb.

    George Socka
    BeachDigital
    http://www.beachdigital.com

    Some contents or functionalities here are not available due to your cookie preferences!

    This happens because the functionality/content marked as “Google Youtube” uses cookies that you choosed to keep disabled. In order to view this content or use this functionality, please enable cookies: click here to open your cookie preferences.

  • George Socka

    June 16, 2009 at 2:18 am in reply to: Will Video Editing on a PC ever truly work?

    Ah yes – the RT2000 – still holding a door open somewhere. Now, nothing but vanilla PC. For the past 9 years.

    George Socka
    BeachDigital
    http://www.beachdigital.com

  • George Socka

    June 11, 2009 at 1:01 am in reply to: Black Bars On Export TO FLV

    460 x 259 is not divisible by 16×9. try 460×260 which is still not 16×9 but closer

    George Socka
    BeachDigital
    http://www.beachdigital.com

  • Because Adobe has not yet figured out, in 2009, how reentrant code programming works. Even Acrobat reader only runs one instance of the program with multiple windows. But then, MS Word works the same way, but at least it opens up independent documents in independent windows. Most of the time. And until we got 64 bit machines with 4 – 8 cores and 20 gb ram, it would not have been worth the effort anyway.

    You could get close under Vista 64 by signing on as different users.

    George Socka
    BeachDigital
    http://www.beachdigital.com

  • I could be wrong tho, and request forgiveness if so.

    The part about buying some creativity was a clue. Heck, I would buy some if the price was right.

    George Socka
    BeachDigital
    http://www.beachdigital.com

  • I represent an important government offial who passed away and left me a large amount of creativity. I can sell you as much as you want. Please send western union money gram first to cover Fedex delivery

    😉

    George Socka
    BeachDigital
    http://www.beachdigital.com

  • George Socka

    May 8, 2009 at 12:05 am in reply to: How can I solve this problem? Premiere cs3

    Drive letters will move around if you have more or fewer drives each time, if you have USB flash drives or cameras plugged in sometimes and sometimes not, if you map network drives sometimes, if one set of removable drives has more partitions than the other, if your iPod or other device is plufgged in or not, if it is Friday 13 or not. Disc management in computer management is the best way to ensure the letters dont change.

    George Socka
    BeachDigital
    http://www.beachdigital.com

Page 4 of 23

We use anonymous cookies to give you the best experience we can.
Our Privacy policy | GDPR Policy