Posted August 02, 2013
Going to upload a bunch of useless and irrelevant videos to Youtube. Some stupid "gameplay" videos, mainly due to the music in the background. My first time ever, never uploaded anything to YT before.
Anyways, the size. They seem a bit on the big size as the main point is the music and not what is on the screen. The biggest videos are like 160 megabytes, for like 7 minutes worth of video (and music).
Is that too much to upload to Youtube? I have no idea what can be considered as a suitable size, is there some max size allowed in Youtube, does it really matter anyway... I am unsure if the video and sound are already compressed now, it is just an avi file (I don't recall if I checked the properties for the video encoder), and I am pretty happy with the quality at the moment.
60-160 megabytes still sounds quite a lot, considering some two-hour movies with pretty good quality being 700-1400 megabytes when they've been compressed properly with divx, xvid or whatever.
The main questions: Does Youtube compress them anyway (both the video and audio) when I upload them? Or should I compress them further with some program myself first (any suggestions?), or even replace the gameplay video with some static pictures in e.g. MS Movie Maker, if the music is the main point anyway? I'd rather still keep the video there, but if it allowed to reduce the size to sane levels, considering that some videos are just showing some static menu anyway.
Sorry, I don't even recall which video capture program I used, I tried one free (open source, I think) that I saw getting good feedback somewhere, and it did the work pretty good and was very easy to use, even captured the Munt audio beautifully (something that e.g. DOSBox's own video capture option doesn't apparently do). I'll see it when I get back home. So it isn't e.g. FRAPS. I'll mention it when I remember it.
The only slight problem I had with it was that as I set it to record only the window where the game runs, the video shows also the window borders (a bit like the visual bug when you play Gothic on Windows 8, or the visual bug in the intro video of, I think, Tomb Raider 2 on GOG). But I can live with that, a relatively small visual glitch in the videos.
Anyways, the size. They seem a bit on the big size as the main point is the music and not what is on the screen. The biggest videos are like 160 megabytes, for like 7 minutes worth of video (and music).
Is that too much to upload to Youtube? I have no idea what can be considered as a suitable size, is there some max size allowed in Youtube, does it really matter anyway... I am unsure if the video and sound are already compressed now, it is just an avi file (I don't recall if I checked the properties for the video encoder), and I am pretty happy with the quality at the moment.
60-160 megabytes still sounds quite a lot, considering some two-hour movies with pretty good quality being 700-1400 megabytes when they've been compressed properly with divx, xvid or whatever.
The main questions: Does Youtube compress them anyway (both the video and audio) when I upload them? Or should I compress them further with some program myself first (any suggestions?), or even replace the gameplay video with some static pictures in e.g. MS Movie Maker, if the music is the main point anyway? I'd rather still keep the video there, but if it allowed to reduce the size to sane levels, considering that some videos are just showing some static menu anyway.
Sorry, I don't even recall which video capture program I used, I tried one free (open source, I think) that I saw getting good feedback somewhere, and it did the work pretty good and was very easy to use, even captured the Munt audio beautifully (something that e.g. DOSBox's own video capture option doesn't apparently do). I'll see it when I get back home. So it isn't e.g. FRAPS. I'll mention it when I remember it.
The only slight problem I had with it was that as I set it to record only the window where the game runs, the video shows also the window borders (a bit like the visual bug when you play Gothic on Windows 8, or the visual bug in the intro video of, I think, Tomb Raider 2 on GOG). But I can live with that, a relatively small visual glitch in the videos.
Post edited August 02, 2013 by timppu
This question / problem has been solved by Maighstir