From: flick harrison (email suppressed)
Date: Mon Aug 06 2007 - 10:12:23 PDT
I haven't tried h.264 on youtube.
I was under the impression it would re-compress to flash video (which
youtube does in the background) better if you upload mp4 - but only
'cos the youtube interface suggests it.
Apparently if you encode at flash low-res then it won't re-encode at
all, meaning you can test your own encode for quality instead of
letting youtube degrade the heck out of it.
Not sure.
* FLICK's WEBSITE:
http://www.flickharrison.com
* MYSPACE:
http://myspace.com/flickharrison
* BLOG / NEWS:
http://zeroforconduct.blogspot.com
On 6-Aug-07, at 9:46 AM, owen wrote:
> Compress at H.264 and post to youtube.com . Then you can embed the
> youtube clips into your own website or blog.
> owen
>
>
>
> On Aug 6, 2007, at 12:11 PM, Ken Paul Rosenthal wrote:
>
>> I've completed a 10" highlight funding reel for my documentary in
>> process, and would like to post it in a dedicated website, or
>> somewhere online where it will showcase well, yet at a low enough
>> resolution that the images won't be appropriated. Also, would a
>> watermark be advisable, or is that being too particular?
>>
>> I know this touches on issues of a free creative market and
>> intellectual property, etc. But I'm less interested in hashing out
>> those issues so much as the practical means of putting the above
>> into place.
>>
>> So if anyone has a favored site/method, I'd appreciate your advice.
>>
>> Thanks, Ken
>>
>> _________________________________________________________________
>> Now you can see trouble
>> before he arrives http://newlivehotmail.com/?
>> ocid=TXT_TAGHM_migration_HM_viral_protection_0507
>>
>>
>> __________________________________________________________________
>> For info on FrameWorks, contact Pip Chodorov at <email suppressed>.
>
> __________________________________________________________________
> For info on FrameWorks, contact Pip Chodorov at <email suppressed>.
>
>
__________________________________________________________________
For info on FrameWorks, contact Pip Chodorov at <email suppressed>.