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Post by unspeakablemag on Dec 31, 2004 17:28:14 GMT -5
hey tim...the reply email you have in your email bounced back to me when i replied..so i just sent it to the email you have in here...so keep an eye out....
Tre' UMAG
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monochrome
john Q. Director
Visit our Website at : http://diggerfilms.com
Posts: 14
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Post by monochrome on Jan 1, 2005 9:48:46 GMT -5
I send you an ehmail too ! waiting for your feedback
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Post by ShadowPuppet on Jan 5, 2005 10:27:59 GMT -5
Hey EK ;D I was away on holiday so I didn't get a chance to write back but, what I meant by quality was that I've been watching a lot of trailers and when you click them to full screen they don't look so good, your's was one of the best I've seen, mabey you can explain a little bit about what gear you use, and the res that you render to .I would like to get into this ,like having a website and broadcast my films and like I said your's is one of the best I've seen, if you want to do it right you go to the people who are doing it right ;D any help you can give would be very much appreciated, by the way great websit to, if your not doing this for a living you should be.
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Post by ExcelsiorKings on Jan 7, 2005 9:54:14 GMT -5
Shadow,
To answer your question:
We have used many different ways of exporting to web video, but by far the elite way is to use the Adobe Media Encoder found in Adobe Premiere Pro. If you use Premiere 6.5 or earlier, you will find a less good version of this tool. This is the only exporter that we have found that automates the entire process. It contains detailed presets for every target audience you could imagine. We output for broadband anything over 1 minute to 256k or 350k, and if it's under 1 minute we'll push to 512k or 700K. In Real Media and I think Quicktime we select streaming broadband quality, then go into the Audiences bit of the settings, click 'Add/Remove Audiences' and select only one audience (whichever the appropriate bitrate is), raher than having all audiences catered for and resulting in a huge file. For Dial Up we do the same, and if over 1 minute we go for 56k, if under 1 minute we go for 28k.
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Post by ShadowPuppet on Jan 7, 2005 22:11:04 GMT -5
Thanks EK That was very informative, I use premiere 6.5 , going to see if I can upgrade to pro, just one more quick question if you don't mind ,does it matter the resolution that you render to, is 640x480 enough to get that quality or do I have to go higher ?.Thanks again for taking the time to help me out. Cheers ;D
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