View Full Version : compressing a file
Devilish
12-19-2006, 06:20 AM
well i just finished rendering my pvp vid.. and its 3gb o.o
i need a way to compress it since the quality is already great but the file is just huge :/.
Valamir
12-19-2006, 06:25 AM
What are you using and how many Mbps are you rendering it at?
Fairydust
12-19-2006, 09:15 AM
There's a stickied encoding guide that you might wanna look up otherwise ^^
kiahann
12-19-2006, 02:44 PM
This might help if your doing it with XviD or WMV http://www.warcraftmovies.com/articleview.php?id=21
Yazuki
12-25-2006, 12:41 AM
You should have a video editting program look up the guide on site and follow the directions :P
yoshi245
12-25-2006, 10:24 AM
This is probably a bit off topic, but are there any programs that compile to .mp4 based video? I ask because I watched a 430mb .mp4, which is just over a 2hour movie, and the quality is quite good for the file size and length of it.
H264 based encoding maybe out of the question since it's fairly recent, but I don't see why .mp4 wouldn't be bad. The only issue would be the right codecs/player(if you got VLC, shouldn't even be a problem to view a .mp4).
davidhildreth
12-25-2006, 05:21 PM
This is probably a bit off topic, but are there any programs that compile to .mp4 based video? I ask because I watched a 430mb .mp4, which is just over a 2hour movie, and the quality is quite good for the file size and length of it.
H264 based encoding maybe out of the question since it's fairly recent, but I don't see why .mp4 wouldn't be bad. The only issue would be the right codecs/player(if you got VLC, shouldn't even be a problem to view a .mp4).
mp4 is just a container, its really no different than avi
the codec that was used is key, its probably h.264 or sorenson 3
thats just a guess based on the container
there are a lot of good h.264 variants out there, and are a great alternative to the dastardly xvid and divx codecs
x264 is a great open source variant that should work with just about any editor
and if you just export your video to an uncompressed codec like huffy you can then use quicktime to encode your video in apple's h.264
boneyb
12-26-2006, 04:57 PM
From experience I'd say go with a DivX encoder. I've taken 800mb movies and knocked them down to 75mb before. As long as you get the DivX codec you should be able to encode this format.
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