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-   -   Squishing it onto a USB (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/what-happens-vegas/531506-squishing-onto-usb.html)

Steven Davis March 30th, 2016 05:54 PM

Squishing it onto a USB
 
So, I have three hour narration, straight talk. And when I rendered it WMV 3mbps, It came out to be 4.2gig. Just shy of the 4 gig usb. I went with WMV hoping the size and universality would be my ticket for broad pc playback for this project, i.e 'who knows what people will play it on' old machines, new machines etc.

Anyone had success with lower qualities to save on size?

Leslie Wand March 30th, 2016 06:14 PM

Re: Squishing it onto a USB
 
use mp4 via handbrake... never had a problem with it in years....

Mike Kujbida March 31st, 2016 07:38 AM

Re: Squishing it onto a USB
 
+1 for Handbrake. Now that you can easily frameserve to it from Vegas, it's a great tool that's even better :)
Vegas-2-HandBrake

Graham Bernard April 1st, 2016 12:53 AM

Re: Squishing it onto a USB
 
+ + For both Gents!

G

Steven Davis April 1st, 2016 07:21 AM

Re: Squishing it onto a USB
 
Thanks for the direction with Handbrake. Hey Mike, is that frameserver config as complicated as it looks?

Christopher Young April 2nd, 2016 06:51 PM

Re: Squishing it onto a USB
 
More + + + + 's for Handbrake

Chris Young
CYV Productions
Sydney

Mike Kujbida April 3rd, 2016 09:30 AM

Re: Squishing it onto a USB
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Steven Davis (Post 1911835)
Thanks for the direction with Handbrake. Hey Mike, is that frameserver config as complicated as it looks?

Steven, I originally thought it would be but the instructions are very clear and I had it up and running in no time at all. Configuring Handbrake to get the results I wanted is a bit more complicated but there are numerous tutorials out there to help you.

Steven Davis April 12th, 2016 10:36 AM

Re: Squishing it onto a USB
 
Thanks for the input guys. My current project is a bulk drive delivery. I'm shooting for the best compatibility, so I was thinking WMV since I know it can be played on almost all pcs.

Pete Cofrancesco April 12th, 2016 01:02 PM

Re: Squishing it onto a USB
 
Why would you use a 4gb usb drive given it's only 3.7gb, smaller than a dvd. I would encode it as mpeg 2 since that's the codec that dvds use. Or use mpeg 4 suggested by others which can compress a video more. By the way Windows Media Player is no longer included in Windows 8 and 10 and has been discontinued.

Steven Davis April 12th, 2016 01:19 PM

Re: Squishing it onto a USB
 
I have 5 hours of final footage, so I'm probably between 8 and 16 gig depending.

Adam Stanislav April 13th, 2016 09:02 AM

Re: Squishing it onto a USB
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Steven Davis (Post 1912516)
I'm shooting for the best compatibility, so I was thinking WMV since I know it can be played on almost all pcs.

If you want the best compatibility, forget WMV altogether. It is an early series of mutually incompatible formats developed by Microsoft for the late 20th Century versions of Windows. It relies heavily on having a specific codec installed on every PC. Even Microsoft has pretty much abandoned the WMV formats by now, so chances are people having the latest versions on Windows will not be able to play it. And of course people with other operating systems (Mac, BSD, Linux, etc) will not be able to play it. And people will not be able to download it to their cell phones and other portable devices.

For actual portability, you should use MPEG-4 for compression and MP4 for the file container (and, as others have suggested, use Handbrake to create it), as just about any computer device on the planet can play it. And it is an official international standard, not a proprietary concoction like WMV. It also compresses video very well.

Andrew Smith April 13th, 2016 02:58 PM

Re: Squishing it onto a USB
 
I dare say that WMV is getting to the point of how I used to view the RealMedia/RealVideo format files. The best thing you can do is to convert it to another format.

Agree on going with mp4.

Andrew

Steven Davis April 13th, 2016 03:03 PM

Re: Squishing it onto a USB
 
Woa, I haven't thought about Real Media in eons.

Mark Holmes April 16th, 2016 03:46 PM

Re: Squishing it onto a USB
 
It makes the most sense, to me, to compress to Sony AVC/AAC and burn to a larger USB. I do this for delivery often, for 2-3hr shows shot at 1080p. The Sony AVC codec is recognized by both Mac and Windows, and also plays fine when plugged into most TVs USB ports.

Just make sure you format the flash drive to EXFAT, so that files over 4GB in size will drop onto it. It's a 10 second process on my Mac in the Disk Utility app.

Steven Davis June 29th, 2017 09:37 AM

Re: Squishing it onto a USB
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark Holmes (Post 1912790)
It makes the most sense, to me, to compress to Sony AVC/AAC and burn to a larger USB. I do this for delivery often, for 2-3hr shows shot at 1080p. The Sony AVC codec is recognized by both Mac and Windows, and also plays fine when plugged into most TVs USB ports.

Just make sure you format the flash drive to EXFAT, so that files over 4GB in size will drop onto it. It's a 10 second process on my Mac in the Disk Utility app.

Hey Mark, what size drive/ bit rate are you getting 2-3 hours on? I currently have printed 8gig drives.


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