H.264/avc 1500kbps 640*480 video

i need a converter that would allow me to convert video to the ipod in that format

To convert to the higher res 640x480 you will more then likley need a pay program. Do a search and you will find them. I use a pay program to convert to that resolution and it works great, but it is a pay program. and I really do not like to recommend pay programs on this tech forum. But if you do a search there are a couple that will do it. If you can live with the lower format, which is fine for viewing on the ipod itself, then there are a number of free programs that will do the job nicely. see here:http://www.squared5.com/svideo/mpeg-streamclip-win.html
or here: http://forums.ilounge.com/showthread.php?s=&threadid=123067

Similar Messages

  • Got problems when converting video to 640*480 m4v

    guys, I got compatibility issues when convert videos to 640*480 h264 m4v.
    I tried MepgStreamclip, and the export to mp4 quicktime mov in Quicktime. ALL FAILED.
    I followed all these 1.5mbps, 640*480, aac-lc requirements when did the conversion.However, my ipod will not recognize of the files.
    I have also noticed that the "Export to Ipod" preset in Quicktime has been changed to 640*480. BUT, what keeps annoying me is the preset is so idiotic!! It ignores the source bps and simply converts everything to 1.5mbps. I got 25mb file after conversion as the source file is 11mb.
    Could anyone kindly point out the Right procedure to convert video to ipod format Manually...... I want to have full control when I am doing this.
    thanks a lot

    any suggestions?

  • 6220c pseudo 640 x 480 video

    pseudo in terms of true resolution, I would love to read comments from users about the 6220c 640 x 480 video resolution, my feeling is this was misrepresented in advertising it is so obviously not a true 640 x 480 I mean you can create a 640 x 480 frame size from 176 x 144 if you really want to, in the case of 6220c it seems to me this is a 320 x 240 video interpolated by some proprietary manner to 640 x 480 frame size and passed off as such for what purpose that serves I have no idea- I would like to get the observations of others who have used it what do you think

    I assume you are using the main camera (5 MP) to take the video.
    I don't know what to say. Surely the sensor is more than capable of recording video at 640 x 480. And since the videos you are taking are 640x480 my guess is that the problem is the video image quality.
    Maybe someone else that has this model can comment.
    640K Should be enough for everybody
    El_Loco Nokia Video Blog

  • How to play MPEG 4 (h.264 / AVC) videos that were encoded for the PSP

    Hello,
    I am trying to play a video in MPEG 4 (h.264 / AVC) format (file extension .mp4) that was encoded to play on the Sony PlayStationPortable (480x272) via QuickTime. The video plays perfectly via VideoLAN, mplayer or the PSP, but QuickTime only opens a black screen without any error message.
    I am using the most current version of QuickTime on WindowsXP or Windows Vista. I have the same problem on either system.
    Can anybody tell me how to resolve that problem? I do not want to reencode the videos, though.

    QuickTimeKirk,
    My goal is to create a looping animation for playback on an iPod. Should be easy right? Not with the QT!
    I did the following:
    1) Render a bunch of frames destined for looping.
    2) Convert them to an uncompresses ".avi" file.
    3) Open the ".avi" file in QT Pro.
    4) Click "Loop"
    5) Play movie. It loops nicely.
    6) Click "Export" and select "Movie to QuickTime Movie"
    7) Click "Save"
    When I play the saved ".mov" file (You said QT retains the metadate requiring looping) IT DOES NOT LOOP!
    To recap: This is a Quicktime movie. I selected looping when I created the bloody thing.
    It
    does
    not
    loop.
    This *****.
    This is REALLY, REALLY, ANNOYING! *** is going on with this QT Pro crap? I simply want to loop the movie. Is that really asking too much? I don't think so.
    Can someone, anyone, please, please, tell me how to force the movie to loop on launch. Forcing an iPod user to muck about and select looping (can they even do that?) is not an option. Period.
    Please help me,
    Doug

  • Importar video 640*480 EncoreDVD2

    Saludos a todos, quisiera saber como hacer para importar videos de menor resolucion a la default en el Encore DVD 2, ejemplo 640*480
    Gracias
    Jorge

    To convert to the higher res 640x480 you will more then likley need a pay program. Do a search and you will find them. I use a pay program to convert to that resolution and it works great, but it is a pay program. and I really do not like to recommend pay programs on this tech forum. But if you do a search there are a couple that will do it. If you can live with the lower format, which is fine for viewing on the ipod itself, then there are a number of free programs that will do the job nicely. see here:http://www.squared5.com/svideo/mpeg-streamclip-win.html
    or here: http://forums.ilounge.com/showthread.php?s=&threadid=123067

  • 640 by 480 video fitting into tv safe area

    How do you get 640 by 480 video to fit in tv safe area?
    There's documentation on scaling slides to the tv safe area; there's documentation on scaling the menu to the tv safe area. Uh, what about fitting the VIDEO to the tv safe area?
    I'm doing a project in imovie with 640 by 480 mpeg 4 clips.

    If you absolutely must ensure that everything in your video is visible on a TV, then you'd have to put a border around the video so the TV overscanning just hides the border. For most viewers, however, they won't notice the lost edge of the video because the action is happening in the TV safe area.
    I don't know an easy way to put a border around your video in iMovie (perhaps one of the picture in picture plugins??), but I'd try the standard process and see if the results are reasonable. Note that adding the border will necessarily make your video smaller.
    If anyone has shown an iMovie on an LCD TV, could you comment whether the CRT-TV overscanning is eliminated?
    John

  • H.264/AVC Encode

    Hiya,
    we all know our video guru el_loco whom I have known a long time and who helped me two consecutive years to get MY PHONE. This process is based on him.
    Our N95 8GBs are HW accelerated for 640X480 REZ'd MPEG4/MP4s and 320X240 REZ'd H.264/AVCs.
    I personally prefer H.264/AVC over MP4 just because it is bit clearer and well saturation level.
    So, I have been trying to find out which converter does its best to convert **bleep** to good H.264s.
    So, I use Videora iPod Converter.
    It uses internet occasionally.
    When you open it;to avoid so many confusions directly create a new profile.
    Name it anything you like.
    And the settings are:
    It goes in this way:
    Settings>New Profile
    General: Profile Name
    iPod 1-pass-ffPPEGVNB
    Video>General>H.264, Baseline Profile, Level 1.3
    (Lets keep General2, and general3 untouched)
    Bitrate:
    ABR
    512(it is enough for me, but there is another option-576, if you want more experiment try it, but leave 768 or higher)
    Max resolution:320x240
    Audio: as you wish, but 64 AAC-LC is enough for me.
    Thanks.
    Any correction, el_loco welcome.

    Hi,
    Just some clarification so I don't continue wasting hours encoding video!
    I've been trying for ages to get H.264 working on my phone at 640x480 resolution. So if I'm understanding this post correctly, the N95 can't go above 320x240 for H.264??
    Don't get me wrong: MPEG-4 looks awesome on the N95 handset, but H.264 would be much, much better for tv-out...
    And can it still support H.264 using widescreen resolutions below 320x240?
    Thanks,
    Jessica

  • H.264/AVC software encoding for cameras

    Hi All,
                 Please let me know, how can we activate H.264/AVC video encoding (new feature in Flash player 11 [H.264/AVC software encoding for cameras]) using actionscript 3 in AIR application, I think, it could not be by default as there are no updates available for flash builder 4.5. So, how can we pick the encoding option. Any new API or methodology for this?
    Any one any idea??

    H.264/AVC software encoding is not turn on by default.  You need to assign the NetStream.videoStreamSettings property an H264VideoStreamSettings object.  Here's a very simple example;
    package
              import flash.display.Sprite;
              import flash.events.NetStatusEvent;
              import flash.media.Camera;
              import flash.media.H264VideoStreamSettings;
              import flash.net.NetConnection;
              import flash.net.NetStream;
              public class TestAVC extends Sprite
                        private var _nc:NetConnection;
                        private var _ns:NetStream;
                        private var _camera:Camera;
                        private var _h264Settings:H264VideoStreamSettings;
                        public function TestAVC()
                                  _h264Settings = new H264VideoStreamSettings();
                                  _nc = new NetConnection();
                                  _nc.client = this;
                                  _nc.addEventListener(NetStatusEvent.NET_STATUS, onNetStatus);
                                  _nc.connect("some fms server");
                                  _camera = Camera.getCamera();
                        private function onNetStatus(e:NetStatusEvent):void
                                  switch (e.info.code) {
      case "NetConnection.Connect.Success":
                                                      _ns = new NetStream(_nc);
                                                      _ns.addEventListener(NetStatusEvent.NET_STATUS, onNetStatus);
                                                      _ns.client = this;
                                                      _ns.attachCamera(_camera);
                                                      _ns.videoStreamSettings = _h264Settings;
                                                      _ns.publish("testAVC");
                                                      break;
                        public function onBWDone():void {}
                        public function onMetaData(o:Object):void {}

  • Issue with H.264/AVC export

    I am a beginner with Adobe Premiere so please excuse me if this is a naive question and terminology.
    The first thing I tried to achieve with Premiere is to convert/compress videos that I capture by my camera. I have been doing this for long long time using NCH Prism Video Converter and It does a good job. It uses AVI container with H.264 codec and compresses a lot while you don't feel much in quality loss. I have been trying to export a video to the same level of compression with kind of similar quality with Premiere, but I haven't yet been successful. The exported files are always larger and lower in quality. I have uploaded the original captured video as well as samples of the videos compressed by Prism and Premiere on my dropbox:
    Original (.mov 131.72 MB): https://db.tt/Qp7TUkPt 
    Prism (.AVI 18.94 MB): https://db.tt/sREwmMdD
    Premiere (.MP4 20.67 MB): https://db.tt/fhmiRUNk
    What I'd like to find is the right format in Premiere to get pretty similar quality&size as I get with Prism. As you can see in the above videos, the Premiere one is larger and more noisy (pixels are distorted especially when the camera is moving and you can see noises that cause pixels to seem jumpy/jaggy - sorry I don't know the exact name of this kind of noise).
    I tried MediaInfo to see what codec Prism is exactly using. It seems that it is using AVC, but I have no idea on how I can install/use AVC codec in Premiere. Below you can find the detailed information about the codec/format that Prism uses.
    I really appreciate any suggestion.
    Video
    ID                                       : 0
    Format                                   : AVC
    Format/Info                              : Advanced Video Codec
    Format profile                           : [email protected]
    Format settings, CABAC                   : Yes
    Format settings, ReFrames                : 3 frames
    Codec ID                                 : H264
    Duration                                 : 1mn 3s
    Bit rate                                 : 2 371 Kbps
    Width                                    : 1 920 pixels
    Height                                   : 1 080 pixels
    Display aspect ratio                     : 16:9
    Frame rate mode                          : Variable
    Frame rate                               : 23.976 fps
    Color space                              : YUV
    Chroma subsampling                       : 4:2:0
    Bit depth                                : 8 bits
    Scan type                                : Progressive
    Bits/(Pixel*Frame)                       : 0.048
    Stream size                              : 17.8 MiB (94%)
    Writing library                          : x264 core 125 r2209 68dfb7b

    Are you doing anything to the footage whilst in PrPro, or just looking to convert & smallify? Just curious ...
    Neil

  • New H.264/AVC encoding for cameras

    Hi All,
                 Please let me know, how can we activate H.264/AVC video encoding (new feature in Flash player 11 [H.264/AVC software encoding for cameras]) using actionscript 3 in AIR application, I think, it could not be by default as there are no updates available for flash builder 4.5. So, how can we pick the encoding option. Any new API or methodology for this?
    In short, how to publish live stream to FMS using H.264 encoding with actionscript 3. [not with FMLE]
    Any one any idea??

    Hi All,
                 Please let me know, how can we activate H.264/AVC video encoding (new feature in Flash player 11 [H.264/AVC software encoding for cameras]) using actionscript 3 in AIR application, I think, it could not be by default as there are no updates available for flash builder 4.5. So, how can we pick the encoding option. Any new API or methodology for this?
    In short, how to publish live stream to FMS using H.264 encoding with actionscript 3. [not with FMLE]
    Any one any idea??

  • From 1920-1080 to 640-480 back to 1920-1080

    I'm making a video in a game and select my screens resolution 1920-1080, but it converts it to 640-480 avi, and I want to upload to Youtube using my screens resolution for a widescreen video. I have Creative Cloud and use Premiere to make the video. I'm not terribly good at this, but I can't find anything that does that in export and actually works. When I look at the video in mediaplayer it's still 3:4. Can I get this video to look good on youtube with 16:9, I see others does it with the same programs I'm using. I don't think I can make the program take the shots in widescreen. Do you have any suggestions?

    You need to figure out how to get 1920x1080 with your screencaputure programm.
    Upscaling 640 to 1920 is not going to work quality wise.

  • Nokia 5230 and H.264/AVC playback issues

    Hi guys
    Can someone please tell me which H.264/AVC profiles do Nokia 5230/5530/5800/N97/X6 play?
    Thank you!

    ok;
    I've found this:
    "The problem is that the Real Player itself is not able to handle MPEG4 part 10 profile (also called H264 or AVC).
    I wish the Real Player could do this, because you can get a high quality videos with small file size using low bitrates.
    It plays only MPEG4 part 2 profile (also called ASP, similar to H263).
    My conclusions are:
    1. The device itself will be able to play H264/AVC given the proper software (The Core Player upcoming version?).
    2. The website is too enthusiastic and made a mistake in stating that 5800 can play H264/AVC out of the box. :-["
    Here http://forum.dailymobile.se/index.php?action=printpage;topic=7687.0
    So i suppose same is the case with 5230.
    Previous Phones: 6600, 7610, 6230, 6230i, 1100, 1112, N70, N73, N95, N95 8GB, 5800XM, 5230, C5, iPhone 3GS, SE Xperia X10, N900, N8, SE Xperia Arc
    Current Phones: Nokia N9, iPhone 4

  • I have about 10000 images of different persons with dimension of 640*480. I wan to crop face from these images to dimension of 200*280. The location of face varies in differnt pics. So, please let me know step by step how can I perform this using the Ligh

    I have about 10000 images of different persons with dimension of 640*480. I wan to crop face from these images to dimension of 200*280. The location of face varies in differnt pics. So, please let me know step by step how can I perform this using the Lightroom software. Also I wan to know what should be the aspect ratio to do so.Thank you in advance

    The aspect ratio should be set to 200x280, or equivalently 5x7.
    I don't think it is possible to do the cropping automatically in Lightroom, you'd have to do this image by image to crop the faces correctly.

  • Using Adobe Media Encoder to create H.264, MPEG-2, and WMV videos from After Effects - 6/23/14

    Very disappointed with this choice. I will definitely be seeking to uninstall this version and go back a version or two. Two many extra steps to export an mp4 now. And now we also have to wait longer for a mp4 to render and can't take advantage of the machine's hardware? You guys fighting mp4 as a standard, forcing us to an additional product, or what? I'll be sharing my extreme disappoint with this 'upgrade' with the rest of the developers at work and who just had it installed. I'm not seeing this being too popular opn social media either. Seems like you only did what was best for you.Thanks for showing us who's boss.

    Frank VA wrote:
    And now we also have to wait longer for a mp4 to render and can't take advantage of the machine's hardware?
    Not necessarily. You can render an intermediate codec with AE's render queue (thus using all of AE's power to render) and then drop that file into the Adobe Media Encoder.
    This was the workflow I've always used - even when AE could encode with MP4. Why? Well, because AE sucked at MP4 encoding. You couldn't even do multipass endoding with it!
    This is a useful workflow in a few ways:
    1. You have an archive-quality file to come back to in the future.
    2. You can use AE's full power to render.
    3. You can use AME's superior encoding capabilities.
    4. You can tweak your compression settings and try various encoding parameters to improve the quality while decreasing the bitrate of your product WITHOUT having to re-render the AE comp every time you try since you're working off of the intermediate file. I mean, imagine a comp with several 3d layers, depth of field, shadows from multiple lights, and 250,000 particles from Particular. What if you made an MP4 and then the client needed a smaller file size or the MP4 you made was too heavily compressed and you needed higher quality? I don't know about you, but I'd much rather only render that 18-hour monster once.
    This workflow actually saves time for many people.
    And, in any workflow, this produces a better product.
    Again, this is what I did even when AE could encode MP4's.
    Frank VA wrote:
    You guys fighting mp4 as a standard, forcing us to an additional product, or what?
    They aren't fighting MP4 as a standard, in fact, when Adobe folks pop in here and answer questions, that's often their recommendation for delivery codec.
    Frank VA wrote:
    Seems like you only did what was best for you. Thanks for showing us who's boss.
    Listen, I understand your frustration. Knocking out a quick compressed file from AE for client review is handy.
    However, maintaining the h.264 encoding in AE took up development time. There are only so many person-hours per week for the (relatively tiny) AE team to spend on building each version of AE.
    I never liked AE's h.264 encoding - AME has always done a superior job. Since we have AME to do our encoding, I would rather the AE team focus their effort on improving AE as a compositing and motion graphics tool rather than as an encoding tool.
    Again, I get the frustration. I can see where it feels like they are doing what's good for them and not us, but I think, in the long run, this way is better for us. Right now, the majority of the AE team is working on making AE faster to work with and faster to render. The sooner we get a relatively bug-free version of that, the better! (Especially for folks on Mac OSX Yosemite who can't RAM preview smoothly in any version of AE).
    And at least the After Effects team has been very transparent about things - for example, this blog post talks about their reasoning: using Adobe Media Encoder to create H.264, MPEG-2, and WMV videos from After Effects

  • 720p30 H.264/AVC is converted to 720p30 AIC

    iLife makes a nasty change from 09!
    In the past one could choose a camera that shot 720p30 H.264/AVC and know no time would be wasted converting to 720p30 AIC. True, editing wasn't as smooth, but lots of time was saved.
    Now iMovie treats 720p30 H.264/AVC as though it were AVCHD and forces an optimize!
    Clearly, for many of us this is NOT OPTIMAL behavior!
    PS: I've always wondered why iM didn't use a good deinterlacer. So I put some DV clips through Comressor's super good deinterlacer. About 5 minutes took all night. So, I guess that's why they use a poor one.
    It looks like Apple is determined to work internally only with progressive AIC.

    Sorry Tom, the Pana 700 may say AVCHD on the body but it does not USE AVCHD when it records 1080p60.
    You need to read more closely. I said "you may read ..." which means you may read marketing materials that say X. I never said AVCHD on the body has anything to do with BD. So why are you connecting these two?
    It is not software or hardware alone that determine what is possible. It is the Sony-Panasonic definition of what IS AVCHD, what IS BD, and what may moved to what.
    Signing an AVCHD and/or BD license requires certain things and excludes certain things. Obviously, it allows you put the AVCHD badge on product as long as it CAN do all that is possible with. And, obviously, it allows a camcorder to record other formats such as DV and H.264 as Panasonic does.
    Neither AVCHD nor BD allow 1080p50/60. Likely they could. Perhaps they will. But, they don't now. The BD spec does not allow 1080p25 or 1080p30 although the AVCHD spec does. But you can copy 1080p25 or 1080p30 AVCHD to a disc that will play in a BD player IF the builder has a license for AVCHD.

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