demofred wrote:
Keith --
Stick with the default size for video files, otherwise they will not look as good. If you could simply resize a video and it would still look as good -- that would be in a dream world.
Fred,
Our company produces video programing as our bread and butter so I'm pretty familiar with video encoding, sizing, data rates, etc.. We also have broadcast quality aquisition and post production equipment so Using standard 352x240 MPEG-1 video at 1600kbs and oversizing it 10% or 15% still looks pretty good and fits an 800x600 display much better. The problem I'm talking about is not that the video file looks bad. It looks fine in both WinMedia player or Opus preview. It's how degraded it gets after publishing that's creating the problem. After the publication process, Opus is playing back very artifacted video compared to the original file that was used. I'm not sure why that is but I want to try and fix it if possible. I hope this is not 'just the way it is' or it's back to the hassle of Director; not an option I relish!
Quote:
I have had clients who insist on full screen (800x600 in that case) MPEG-1 files. They understand the quality will be poor, but it's apparently OK for them. There's not a simple button to push in OPUS which changes your video into high quality, resized images. Look at using MPEG-2 (DVD 720x540) for the quality you want. It's then mandatory for the viewer to be able to play DVDs, but many new computers can do this.
We often produce DVD's and are set up to easily create MPEG-2 files. Unfortunately, this is to be a generally distributed disc. Many people do not have a 3rd party MPEG-2 decoder installed on their computer and WinMedia does not supply one. This is an absolute requirement to using MPEG-2 and decoders cost $. I considered doing the whole project on DVD-video but simple linear video without interactivity is not the best tool for this type of "how to" title.
If you have a high speed internet connection, please take a couple of minutes to download the 7.13MB project and take a look for yourself. I'm really hoping someone from DW will address this issue ASAP tomorrow.
Thanks in advance,
Keith Martin
Intramedia Film, Video & Digital Construction