Terence Murphy
July 4th, 2011, 11:56 AM
We're looking at changing our main distribution format from DVD to encoding short sport clips (about a minute apiece) into a format of choice, and copying onto flash drives for our customers on site (typically 4-40 clips per person, and they'll be able to add files at later dates space permitting).
We're filming in AVCHD, 1080p60 28 MBps (Sony CX700v), and need to downsample into a format that is reasonable for most computers to handle (I expect most customers to have bottom-end Windows PCs). What is a good minimum common denominator resolution, codec, and bitrate to use that most people will be able to play? I've been fiddling with both h.264 and mpeg-4, either 1920x1080 or 1280x720, and 6-8 MBps, and everything plays just great on my quad-core MacBook Pro (including the original 60p footage), but it all has problems on my 3.5 year-old MacBook Pro (Core 2 Duo, hardly a slouch speed-wise). It also all fails to play well off a flash drive in my LG BD-390 Blue Ray player. I found someone else on the web distributing similar videos at 1280x720 5 MBps h.264 in a MP4 wrapper, and I have similar problems with them on the old MacBook Pro and the LG player.
But the old MacBook Pro can play HD footage from an iPhone (1280x720, ~10 MBps), so I'm not sure why it's having problems with my downsampled files.
I've tried encoding with both AunSoft's MTS Converter, and with QuickTime 7. Any recommendations on the best way to encode, and what format/res/bitrate that our customers will be able to play without problems?
-Terence
We're filming in AVCHD, 1080p60 28 MBps (Sony CX700v), and need to downsample into a format that is reasonable for most computers to handle (I expect most customers to have bottom-end Windows PCs). What is a good minimum common denominator resolution, codec, and bitrate to use that most people will be able to play? I've been fiddling with both h.264 and mpeg-4, either 1920x1080 or 1280x720, and 6-8 MBps, and everything plays just great on my quad-core MacBook Pro (including the original 60p footage), but it all has problems on my 3.5 year-old MacBook Pro (Core 2 Duo, hardly a slouch speed-wise). It also all fails to play well off a flash drive in my LG BD-390 Blue Ray player. I found someone else on the web distributing similar videos at 1280x720 5 MBps h.264 in a MP4 wrapper, and I have similar problems with them on the old MacBook Pro and the LG player.
But the old MacBook Pro can play HD footage from an iPhone (1280x720, ~10 MBps), so I'm not sure why it's having problems with my downsampled files.
I've tried encoding with both AunSoft's MTS Converter, and with QuickTime 7. Any recommendations on the best way to encode, and what format/res/bitrate that our customers will be able to play without problems?
-Terence