I'm missing something. YouTube says to prepare videos as follows:
30fps
320 x 240
MPEG-4
VideoStudio only allows MPEG-2 or MPEG-1. Other than that, I'm doing what they say. Yet a 3:45 minute video is about 88Mb - way too big for YouTube. Can anyone help me out here?
Thanks,
Mark.
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http://www.dvdvideosoft.com/guides/dvd/upload-video-to-YouTube.htm
Upon first run it will open ie , and show site listing ability to purchase updated product ... ignore that , it only happens one time .
And away you go . -
Thanks for the link, Bjs. I have a some questions about it.
First, have you used it yourself?
Second, if your video is already in YouTube format (FLV, 320x240, and whatever the audio is supposed to be), is this YouTube Uploader still going to reencode it?
Third, I understand that whatever format you upload to YouTube, that it will still be reencoded. So, are the YouTube people going to reencode it yet again? -
I personally encode to .FLV BEFORE I upload to YouTube....with FLV Encoder. I have a set method but I don't have a set bitrate, formula, etc etc because I don't think there is a best method....personally. The end results once the video goes live on YouTube are just too hit or miss.
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Thanks for your replies and the link. I found what I believe to be a good freeware encoder which reduced my 88Mb MPEG to less than 10Mb FLV. It's called Riva FLV Encoder 2.0. I re-uploaded a previous file and the quality is significantly better. I've probably seen better on YouTube, but the footage was taken in a dull room.
Ignore the content, just a mate & I having a bit of fun, but here it is: http://youtube.com/watch?v=NI__p-6WigE -
manono , yes , I used it , otherwise I would not have mentioned it .
Ie , I download it ... my pc gose nutts ... its my prob to sort out ... and not recommend it ever .
Seems to do the job .
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Ok , I see ... do you mean if its already in correct format , will the tool do one of two things .
A: Reconvert
B: Just upload the sod
Its B , when I selected a flv (created using another program) .
Oh you mean I have to go get an account ... dont you ... lol
Finished : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sMlnkI-sZPI ... in a few moments , just a small pre clip warning of whats to come .
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I read the question and went on a search , and also came across videoraxbox360converter , just out of curiosity ... now that I have one of those fang dangle things ... and yes , I have been recording gears of wars to my pc .
But I get killed way to soon ... lol
Now that is all set , I'll have to do some xbox360 caps ...
PS : At the end it gives the file link and the info you stick into your own web page ... nice and easy .
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As for markannab's report on Riva FLV Encoder , I reported an issue with winnt 2000 pro , where it seemed to lockup and do nothing when it came to encoding a while back ... still not sorted -
A: Reconvert
B: Just upload the sod
Its B , when I selected a flv (created using another program) .
Oh you mean I have to go get an account ... dont you ... lol
I'm still curious as to whether or not the YouTube people will reencode it after they get their grubby paws on it. They do, don't they? I just hate for those people to mess up something I encoded nicely. I have yet to see a decent video at that place. I mean, 320x240 is pretty low, but I can create much nicer looking 320x240 videos than I've seen on that site. -
Well , if thats what they do in there spare time , then there's not going to be much one can do about it .
But have a look at this : http://www.mariposahd.tv/critique_of_youtube_upload_process
It'll give some better idea's .
Or go to something like divxshare like I initially done : http://www.divshare.com/download/1321842-8da -
Using Riva FLV Encoder, I created a video that was clean & crisp for a 320 x 240. Default setting was a bitrate of 360, so I left it at that. The file size was around 9Mb. But once uploaded, it had deteriorated dramatically.
As a test, I re-did it the same, only with a higher resolution (480 x something). I froze both videos at the same point & tabbed back & forth. The higher resolution one had deteriorated far more. A microphone cable on the floor was visible on the 320 but almost gone on the 480.
What I don't understand is that occasionally, there's a video on YouTube that is very clear. How do THEY do it? -
You shouldn't have converted it to flv before uploading it to youtube.
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Originally Posted by markannab
There is even a video on youtube on how to make good looking vids....with Windows Media Encoder...I tried it and it looked no better than my other 109 vids. -
Originally Posted by Soopafresh
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Hello everyone.
I've been trying my hand at this YouTube crave n all. After a little over an
hour, I was finally able to create an account, and then upload my very first
vhelp sample flv clips, hehe
There's a lot theories about the Bitrate and Re-encoding of (source) video's
to FLV video onto YouTube, and I'd like to take a crack at determining if this
is true or not. read on..
Now, I was not sure of a few things, so I took it upon myself to upload a
short video clip in an effort to validate for myself weather it is true that
YouTube re-encodes the uploaded video's.
YouTube Video:
Video Source: Laserdisc
Movie/Film: Blade Runner
Capture Card: Winfast TV2000XP Expert
Source Video: XviD
Video: FLV format
Length: 13 seconds
Description:
After capturing the laserdisc, I encoded it to XviD. I performed this step
some weeks ago. I just happen to have it laying around on my HDD. I then
took it to use as an example demo for encoding to FLV format, using a bitrate
setting of 1000, and then uploaded to YouTube, to my youtube account I just
opened, today.
XviD-- was encoded with the RivaFLVencoder tool, to FLV format, with
1000 bitrate setting. The original source was YUY2 -> MPEG-2 based, and then
XviD. Later, converted to FLV, and finally, uploaded to YouTube FLV format.
Is it re-encoded or not, that is the question going around here.
Comments:
On my AMD XP 1800+ computer, the FLV video (blade runner youtube demo)
seems to play a little studdery. The player that I'm using is the one that
came with the RivaFLVencoder tool. Maybe this is the cause of the studder.
However, on my upgraded XP Home computer, the video plays, smoothly.
As far as quality goes, for FLV and uploaded to youtube, I'm surpised to see
that it is (still kept) in good quality for the format and size. I haven't quite
determined if it did in fact re-encoded it. I have to analize the youtube video
and my actual FLV video still on my HDD. The problem with this route is that
AVIsynth (the only tool via directshowsource()) failed to open FLV files. So,
I can't analize either of *any* flv files until I can figure out how to open them
inside AVIsynth.
If anyone of you cridicting flv youtube videos want to cridict this one, feel
free to do so. It was my first, so be nice to me
Q: can I D/L my own uploaded youtube video's (so that I can analze them) ??
-vhelp 4360 -
Yea use keepvid.com to download the youtube vids. To open in avisynth I use directshowsource. FFDshow to decode. And you need flvsplitter to be copied into your system32 directory and installed.
I've done some analyzing of youtube vids and here is a thread of what I came up with:
https://forum.videohelp.com/topic332210.html#1727426 -
manono said
What's the secret then, Soopafresh? Make a higher-rez good quality XviD and let them reencode it? The better the initial quality, the better the finished FLV? There's a thread about this somewhere around here, isn't there? Maybe I had better go track it down.
What is the secret indeed...I can think of a few things worth testing:
1) Add grain to the pre-encoded AVI to make the flv encoder allocate more bitrate. Avisynth plugins Addgrain, BergfilterCollection, and Blockbuster can do this.
2) Pre-Downmix the audio to normalized mono wav. They're going to do it anyway before making it a 64k mp3, you might as well be in control of the sound. I think a lot of the sync problems on youtube are due to the source files having vbr mp3.
3) Smoothen only the dark areas of the picture. The theory here is that youtube's crappy flv encoder will allocate more bitrate to the lighter, more detailed parts of the image - the part to which the human eye is more sensitive . Kind of the opposite of idea #1. The VirtualDub plugin ShadowSmoother can do this.
4) Make the pre-encoded AVI mod16 in dimension. That'll give the flv encoder no excuse based on the block size to create macroblocks.
5) Add motion blur to the moving scenes ? This might be interesting. After all, it's almost always movement that starts the macro blocks going.
6) Make the source file 480x352, XVID or DIVX at as high quality as you can go. Remember to add the size of the mono WAV or cbr mp3 file you'll be muxing into the equation.
Anyway, these are all un-tested. I'll bet the only thing that matters is bit rate.
I'm going to look around for youtube vids that are especially good or bad looking. There must be characteristics that make them good or bad looking. Maybe we can post some more examples:
Bad (technical problems)
Here's what looks like HDV 16x9 letterboxed, but they didn't deinterlace it before handing it off to youtube.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLcho1Ho6b4
Very Good
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cDgd3jLU6Us
Here's an analysis of a file with many macroblocks. Note the mod2 dimensions
And here's a file with almost no video uglies and mod16 dimensions
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Originally Posted by vhelp
For avisynth, you need ffdshow to decode. The flvsplitter I have is an old one and the initial instructions I followed said to put it into the system32 folder.
Edit: Sorry not through command prompt(had a few too much last nite). You go to start --> run then type inCode:regsvr32 c:\windows\system32\flvsplitter.ax
Then through directshowsource you can open flv files. -
Originally Posted by Soopafresh
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It has been an interesting weekend.. with FLV video and youTube, etc. Anyway.
I spent most of today trying to get flv and avisynth to work, and finally got
it going and I can now analize the videos.
I also spend most of the this afternoon debugging the flv videos I would
encode with the RivaFLVencoder tool. It would not work under WIN98,
and it would hang. This caused me tons of frustrations. Anyway. later
on, I found a way to encode to FLV format through ffmpeg.
For those curious, I use the following cmd-line param script:
--> ffmpeg.exe -i d:\sitc.huffy.v1.avi -ar 22050 -ab 64 -f flv -s 320x240 -r 29.970 -b 1000k -y sitc.v1.flv
For what its worth mentioning here, debugging cmd-line param scripts can be
a tedius chore. I wish there was an easier way, and in fact, I'm working on
just a thing -- for another topic, perhaps. Anyways. The above should work
fine for most endoing to FLV videos through ffmpeg inside a dos console box
(window) using a .bat script. Save the above using notepad as flv.bat or
call it what you want. Then open a dos (console) window and type in:
--> d:\flv.bat
..which will run the ffmpeg conversion to an flv video.
About the "flv.bat" script-- it is as basic as can be. I don't know if it can be any
optimized than it already (seemingly) is. Maybe there is a way to tune it up some.
But working with param scripts is a chore. Between repetitive manuvering around
the destop and opening Players (WMP or Riva or vdub via avisynth plugin) and
various Editors (vdub) during debugging is a lot of work. I hope to fix that in
the distant future.
About the param values-- Briefly, here is what they intail:
-i ---- is the Input file source ie, an Huffy or Lagarith video
-ar -- is the Audio sample rate ie, 11050, 22050, 44144, and 48000
-ab -- is the Audio Bitrate ie, 64Kbits, 128Kbits, 384Kbtis, etc.
-f ---- is the Force Format ie, force it to FLV or MPEG, DivX etc.
-s ---- is the Resolution setup ie, 320x240, 352x480, 640x480, 720x480 etc.
-r ---- is the Frame Rate or fps of the finished video, ie 24, 25, 29.970 etc.
-y ---- is the overwrite to overwrite the [y/n] and just writes the source out
-b ---- is the Bitrate you want to set the flv video to ie, 360k, 1000k etc.
About the flv encodes-- I have noticed that even when you set the fps
[-r] to 29.970 fps, when you open the finished encoded flv inside vdub via AVIsynth
plugin and script, or open through outher flv player who feature an info option,
the report seems to always point to 25 fps. I don't know if this is a bug or some
of ther param that is missing in the encoding setup.
Analizing FLV video through directshow-- can be easily done with the
proper D/L files and installations. AVIsynth is the prefered method of choice.
The script goe's like this, typed in notepad and saved as flv.avs, and then imported
into your video editor, below.
x = "d:\sitc.v1.flv"
DirectShowSource( x )
If you video does not open in your editor, it might be on account of the audio.
You can turn off audio using the revised .bat script, below:
x = "d:\sitc.v1.flv"
DirectShowSource( x, audio=no )
From here, you should be able to now analize your videos, should you choose to
do so.
That's about it, for the moment.
From the Video Worksation of,
-vhelp 4364 -
45tripp -
http://fsinapsi.altervista.org/code/avinaptic/avinaptic-20070410-full.zip
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expounding on vhelp's great idea, here's a batch file which will process a folder of, AVIs, MPGs, WMVs, and MOV files, converting them all to Youtube quality .flv files for previewing. At least you'll know what to expect before the hassle of uploading and disappointment....
Needs a recent copy of Mencoder
Right Click to download
youtube_emulate.cmd
Example of Output -
norway.flv -
Evening everyone.
I'm having some trouble with the flvplayer v1.3.3 tool. It does not want to work inside
WIN98 at all. It keeps crashing withthe following message (below), maybe you know
something ??
(!) The \windows\temp\RARSFX0\FLVPLAYER.EXE file appears to be corrupt.
Reinstall the file, and then try again.
But, the file is fine. Just as a test, I re-copied it to my other computer (XP Home) and
in another folder, and this same file plays perfectly fine. It seems that every time I run
flvplayer.exe, it creates a temporary directory (with the three files, below) and then
deletes them after the error message is removed.
The \TEMP\ folder (above) has the following files:
1 - [NSIS].nsi -------- 1kb ------ 4/3/07
2 - flvplayer.exe ------ 1,454kb -- 2/17/06
3 - flvplayer_102.ico -- 25kb ----- 4/3/07
I really like this player because its pretty compact and features: 1x and 2x size, and
includes the info options so that I can get a quick glance at *any* files specs.
(I'd use a cmd-line tool to retreave audio/video info but I don't know of any
that are around or do this -- I like cmd-line stuff, cause you can add them into
specialized tools of your design)
Anyway, I like using the player above because you can simply drag a file into it and
it will play immediately. It's not fancy or resource-hungry, so I basically use this in
my everyday flv 'ing around, unless something better comes along.
On the other hand, and fwiw, in one of my ffmpeg .bat scripts, I include the ffplay
(a cmd-line player.. opens a GUI window to play your video -- pretty bare bones
and tiny, and just about right for the job -- debugging flv encodes and stuff right
away after encodes)
-vhelp 4365 -
How about 320x240 @ the max 100mb?
That woman's face looks kinda long up there ^ -
How about 320x240 @ the max 100mb?
That woman's face looks kinda long up there ^
dial-up, no way. I have to be very selective at this point in time, until I can
find something for $15 bucks in DSL. Anyway.
That face is Sarah Jessica Parker, from the tv show, SaTc. on ch CW, usually
on at 11:00pm, every night.
** I was experimenting on cropping technique for improving flv quality -- every
** little bit counts.. (720 / 2) = 360 - 320 = (40/2) = crop 20/20 Lf/Rt gives a
** sharper picture, imo.
I was messing around with encoding the opening theme portions and a few cuts
from captures of nice scenary that I was trying to select for my next upload to
youTube. Anyway. She was talking to her friend, Maranda, at the park, and..
If you are refering to the youTube demo pic further up above, it is from youtube's
default 2x or 1/2x enlargement. The size seem to be actually 447 x 337 px. But
you can click the 2nd button from the farther right side, again to get the orig
320 x 240, and click again, back to 447 x 337 px.
-vhelp 4367 -
I use MPEG-1 with good results
usually 352x240 with 3 million bits works for me
http://www.youtube.com/dcortex
check it out these are my videos -
I use MPEG-1 with good results
usually 352x240 with 3 million bits works for me
http://www.youtube.com/dcortex
of youTube videos. Unless, you ment that you encode your videos to mpeg1
@ 3000kbts and then let youtube do the rest !
Obviously, I'm still a newbie to youtube.. but, its actually been quite interesting.
And I've been comming up with all sorts of ideas for throwing videos on my page.
All I need now, is a faster connection, otherwise I won't be uploading much, if
any.
Oh yea.., question.. how do you stop a youtbue page from d/l 'ing when you
don't want it to continue anymore -- without resorting to closing the page ??
-vhelp 4368 -
how do you stop a youtbue page from d/l 'ing when you
don't want it to continue anymore?
PAUSE?
Yeah I let em re-encode..
I see yours look very sharp, but , like you say my reencodes don't suffer -
** I was experimenting on cropping technique for improving flv quality -- every
** little bit counts.. (720 / 2) = 360 - 320 = (40/2) = crop 20/20 Lf/Rt gives a
** sharper picture, imo.
Good stuff, Vhelp
Oh yea.., question.. how do you stop a youtbue page from d/l 'ing when you
don't want it to continue anymore -- without resorting to closing the page ??
I don't think there is a way without closing the tab -
Here's a brilliant app. Make sure you change the settings to XVID for the best quality.
Http://www.vdownloader.es
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