Dear Brian,
Thank you very much for your suggestion. This was indeed a good idea, I made one try as you suggest, but unfortunately, I doesn’t work quite well :
-I can indeed, on the G5 used to make the compression, change the audio track, add the ‘good’ AAC sound, and erase the ‘bad’ little endian. when I play it on the same machine, it works fine, I read the file correctly with the good sound codec.
But… when I save the new QT file, and take it on another computer, the sound disapears. From what I understand, it is because Quick time only makes a link to the AAC sound file, and when I save it, it doesn’t create an embedded file (by the way, after saving, the file size stays the same than the original file size with little endian sound), so when I play it on another computer, there is simply no more sound… (but I guess the little endian sound is still there, as the size of the file didn’t change).
So, the only way I know to create an embedded file in QT, is to export it, but when I do that in QT, I get the same image problem (seems to be playing at 15 fps) than when I was doing that with compressor… I understand the feeling of the Snake bitting its own tail 😉
I don’t know if you have any other suggestion to create the QT file besides making an export, it would be welcome if you do!
PS : even wearder : when I try the same compression in compressor with an older G5 (which has the same softwares, and same versions), the new H264 files plays well and doesn’t have this problem of images playing at 15 fps…
Instead of being lost in translation, i get lost in compression… 😉
Thanks again for your help!
Mathieu.