If you like Vegas better why not just use Vegas?I am not familiar with this program compared to Vegas.
I used Avidemux because it is free and included in my favorite Linux distro FatDog64. If I had Vegas I would have used Vegas per your request.
If you like Vegas better why not just use Vegas?I am not familiar with this program compared to Vegas.
I don't know if using a different program would change the render times. I assume they are all the same.If you like Vegas better why not just use Vegas?
I used Avidemux because it is free and included in my favorite Linux distro FatDog64. If I had Vegas I would have used Vegas per your request.
Last test for today. Took a 812 MB 30 second clip of Far Cry 2 and converted to a 40 MB 1920 by 1080 MKV in 22 seconds using the SSD on the i7-3770s system.
Free unregistered FRAPS is limiting me to a 30 second clip with a watermark.
Fraps is the best it records raw file. no compression at all.Try PlayClaw. I like it better than FRAPS.
Yes, shouldn't post so late at night :whiste:Ok Video Output > Configure.
I didn't touch these settings before as I said.
Encoding Mode - Constant Rate Factor (Single Pass)
Default Quality - 20
I think you have it backwards because on the slider it says '0' is at the High Quality end. '51' is at the Low Quality end.
Fast First Press - Checked.
Macroblock Tree Rate Control - Checked.
Framerate lookahead - 40
IDC Level - Auto
Exactly.ok so mkv is a container. basically it means it holds metadata like an id3 tag. it has nothing to do with quality, although the mkv container could be a smaller file size compared to avi.
Hmm 60fps recording can be fairly taxing for your system and I don't think it'll give you that much of a quality improvement over 30fps. Also, not sure if Youtube keeps it at 60fps.What about recording with fraps @ 60 fps oppose to 30? My video was smooth if you watched it on youtube. 60 fps would be a bigger file size, but maybe even smoother? Your opinion?
Not a big deal. You lose the support for chapters and some players might trip over it. But mkvs aren't problem free either, the container has changed several times in its history with corresponding toothing issues. It's still the preferrable container though.According to this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_container_formats
AVI has incomplete H.264 support. Not sure how big of a deal that is.
Youtube makes this easy. Go view my video (or any 1080p video) at 1080p and then turn the quality down to 720p and view the same video.I want to compare ... 1080p vs 720p...