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-   -   help with format choice (https://www.rcuniverse.com/forum/digital-video-dv-video-editing-software-353/9368904-help-format-choice.html)

skylane42 12-29-2009 11:54 AM

help with format choice
 
I got a new camera for Christmas. It will shoot nice video with sound but, it shoots in QuickTime format. I checked on a 2 1/2 minute vid I shot and it is like 153mb and takes 30 minutes to up load. Can the video be converted to a smaller format for faster uploads and downloads> What are the better formats to use for uploading and viewing videos? I sure would appreciate some advise.

Thanks,
Bill

MinnFlyer 12-29-2009 12:16 PM

RE: help with format choice
 
WMV seems to be the format of choice

skylane42 12-29-2009 12:49 PM

RE: help with format choice
 
Are any of the formats smaller like a mp3 that will upload and download faster?

MinnFlyer 12-29-2009 01:04 PM

RE: help with format choice
 
Not that I know of, but with WMV you can adjust settings to make them stream, or adjust size and/or quality to make the file sizes smaller

lejongleur 12-29-2009 01:20 PM

RE: help with format choice
 
MPEG (.mpg files) offer tremendous file size compression, but you either need a camera that can take movies in mpg format, or software like Adobe Premiere to edit it afterwards. I believe mpeg-4 is the latest version and allows sophisticated compression resulting in good quality clips small enough to easily upload or even email.

It's possible that Microsoft Movie Maker (free) or Pinnacle Studio (cheaper than Premiere) can do this format conversion but you would have to check out their specs.

There are also utilities you can buy (e.g. Movavi for $60) that offer extensive conversion capabilities.

Hope this helps!...Chris

AH-64_d 12-29-2009 09:20 PM

RE: help with format choice
 
Pinnacle Studio readily converts between these formats. Having repeatedly read about how dandy Microsoft Movie Maker was, I tried it today, and was amused to find that it refused to recognize Quick Time files from a DXG-125V HD camera. Took the same files into Studio, which spat them out in WMV, AVI, and MP-4 to share with family on their multiplicity of electronic Christmas gadgets. If you are really serious about uploading videos, buy Camtasia. It is a professional tool that is easy to use.

lejongleur 12-29-2009 09:45 PM

RE: help with format choice
 
Thanks, that's very useful information. I had heard that Movie Maker could not handle any HD video. I guess its main claim to fame is that is can rotate AVI videos 180 degrees quickly (!!!)

AH-64_d 12-30-2009 08:19 AM

RE: help with format choice
 
File size is another consideration. The edited MP-4 video clip was 7.2 megabytes. When I converted it to WMV, it became 12.6 megabytes. When converted to MP-2, it was 182 megabytes.

lejongleur 12-30-2009 12:44 PM

RE: help with format choice
 
MPEG-4 is definitely superior. I believe that standard DVD format is MPEG-4 for the video tracks. A DVD is only 4.7GB and easily stores 2 hours of good quality SD movies.

Rebeccageorge 02-19-2010 08:01 AM

RE: help with format choice
 


ORIGINAL: skylane42

Are any of the formats smaller like a mp3 that will upload and download faster?
it depends on your connection speed and also the file size you're uploading... the smaller the file the faster you can upload...
It is recommended that you upload wmv file format... good quality and smaller size.. so faster upload

Pimp Myspace

Dark asylumn 04-10-2010 11:44 PM

RE: help with format choice
 
Ihave found this one to be great and easy to use free also

http://www.any-video-converter.com/p...or_video_free/


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