Video People...
You guys who mess with video and whatnot, I've got a question...
This camera of mine (256mb card in it) can do like 12-15 mins of video.
The problem is, when the videos done, it's 200 megs. Thats too fucking big, I'm pretty sure.
How do I make the damned things smaller? (It's .mov format when it comes out, if that helps)
Help's appreciated.
-JT
This camera of mine (256mb card in it) can do like 12-15 mins of video.
The problem is, when the videos done, it's 200 megs. Thats too fucking big, I'm pretty sure.
How do I make the damned things smaller? (It's .mov format when it comes out, if that helps)
Help's appreciated.
-JT
If you plug it into any editing program (Windows Movie Maker for the thrifty, Adobe Premiere or another third-party for those willing to pay) it will convert/compress it for you.
Keep in mind, this sounds like you are using a point-shoot PHOTO camera for movies, so I'm sure your framerate is around 15-20, whereas NTSC standard is 29.97 fps, so unless you tell whatever program it is what your source video's timecode is, it's going to be choppy when it renders it. I used Adobe Premiere 6.0 before I had a mini-DV and tried doing little videos with a Sony P&S camera and the results were horrible.
Keep in mind, this sounds like you are using a point-shoot PHOTO camera for movies, so I'm sure your framerate is around 15-20, whereas NTSC standard is 29.97 fps, so unless you tell whatever program it is what your source video's timecode is, it's going to be choppy when it renders it. I used Adobe Premiere 6.0 before I had a mini-DV and tried doing little videos with a Sony P&S camera and the results were horrible.
Originally Posted by MerF
If you plug it into any editing program (Windows Movie Maker for the thrifty, Adobe Premiere or another third-party for those willing to pay) it will convert/compress it for you.
Keep in mind, this sounds like you are using a point-shoot PHOTO camera
Keep in mind, this sounds like you are using a point-shoot PHOTO camera
so I'm sure your framerate is around 15-20, whereas NTSC standard is 29.97 fps, so unless you tell whatever program it is what your source video's timecode is, it's going to be choppy when it renders it.
I used Adobe Premiere 6.0 before I had a mini-DV and tried doing little videos with a Sony P&S camera and the results were horrible.
Originally Posted by LowTech1
whatever the hell that means...
Should I even bother? The little ones ive done so far don't look as horrible as i figured they would.
Hope that helps.
chop the sections you want, encode with divx
http://www.virtualdub.org/
http://www.free-codecs.com/download/...Codec_Pack.htm
http://www.virtualdub.org/
http://www.free-codecs.com/download/...Codec_Pack.htm
Originally Posted by vmspionage
chop the sections you want, encode with divx
http://www.virtualdub.org/
http://www.free-codecs.com/download/...Codec_Pack.htm
http://www.virtualdub.org/
http://www.free-codecs.com/download/...Codec_Pack.htm
Just my opinion.
Originally Posted by MerF
Ya know, I used to be all abotu DivX, but honestly, with the codecs Windows has for Media PLayer 9+, .wmv is better for less space than .avi is. Granted, .avi is more "raw", but for practical web applications, you're better off just rendering a .wmv or .mpeg.
Just my opinion.
Just my opinion.
You see, maybe my vid card is fucked up, because I will get choppy with .avi WAY before I will with a .wmv, even with a huge bitrate, I will be able to play Windows media better...hmmm.
Originally Posted by MerF
You see, maybe my vid card is fucked up, because I will get choppy with .avi WAY before I will with a .wmv, even with a huge bitrate, I will be able to play Windows media better...hmmm.





