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  1. FILE SIZE after rendering

    Got a 360p .mp4 that's 183Mb in size.
    Wanted to remove a few seconds at the beginning, slightly adjust the audio volume and re-render.
    Did this in Camtasia. (2019)
    Camtasia's 360p .mp4 output (of this SHORTENED video) is 1.05GB - yes GIGABYTES!! WTF?!
    Around TEN TIMES the size of the original 360p .mp4..!!
    This is MADNESS!!

    I want the output to be the same size as the original (or in this case, expected it to be slightly smaller - not 10x BIGGER!!)

    Can anyone help me please?
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  2. Cut the mp4 with Avidemux.
    This is fast and there is no recode.

    To change the audio volume you can use clever FFmpeg-GUI.
    Load the cutted mp4, click main page, click encode/convert audio stream, make your changes and click encode.
    If finished, click multiplex, your new audiostream is shown in green; deselect the source audiostream on the left, leave all other streams selected.
    Set mp4 as container, click multiplex. Done.
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  3. Originally Posted by ProWo View Post
    Cut the mp4 with Avidemux.
    This is fast and there is no recode.
    Or you could do the Cut with Clever.
    So just one program to use.
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  4. Can anyone tell me WHY Camtasia's output is 10x bigger than original file?
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  5. 'Clever FFmpeg GUI' only available for Windows.. I'm on a mac.. - anything similar available for mac?
    Tx
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  6. Member
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    AVIDemux, as mentioned above.

    Can anyone tell me WHY Camtasia's output is 10x bigger than original file?
    Because the bitrate has been set (or defaults to), a higher rate than the original file. Look in the export settings for export bitrate adjustment.

    Use MediaInfo to get the original bitrate and try to match it (or a bit more) for the new export.
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  7. Member Cornucopia's Avatar
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    More accurately, because what you had set was re-encoding the whole thing (and it likely WAS higher as Alwyn mentioned) rather than use an I-frame based cutting method. It is very likely that Camtasia has no understanding of I-frame cutting, so it HAS to re-encode (the whole thing).


    Scott
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  8. Member
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    @A941, have a look at this Camtasia tute:

    https://www.techsmith.com/learn/tutorials/camtasia/export-share/

    In particular, note the "quality" setting in the Advanced options:

    Image
    [Attachment 87312 - Click to enlarge]


    Reduce the quality to achieve the file size you want.

    @Scott, why would re-encoding "the whole thing" necessarily change the size if the encoding bitrate is set to be similar to the original? It's already an MP4.
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