I remember watching this video a few months ago. I was simply unsatisfied with the other tutorials out there and had to dig deeper. And wouldn't you know it, I struck gold. Damn shame for the SEO not putting it up there. I spent half an hour skimming through my search history just to find it again.
Amazing tutorial. No words other than yours to explain how well I understood this. Why does everything have to be so complicated? If the world was simple like this, everyone would understand what I meant. Well done! Regards, BlueLixard
Stallzyx: According to Adobe, " If you have a GPU, Maximum Bit Depth is irrelevant as you’re already getting that performance if applicable to your media. Turn this off." And, regarding maximum render quality, again from Adobe: "If you have a GPU, this, too can be turned off. The only reason to turn it on is if you are scaling your images - up or down - and see jagged edges on clearly defined diagonal lines. As of this time, scaling is still CPU-based, and only effects calculated using the CPU are affected by this setting." Larry
Nevlozz: Hmmm... These settings should not make audio "choppy." Choppiness is generally caused by bandwidth that is too small to properly play a file. But audio files are tiny - compared to video. If the video isn't choppy, the audio shouldn't be choppy either. Double-check your compression settings. If things still don't work properly contact me directly at larry (at) larryjordan (dot) com. Larry
Hey Larry, Many thanks for all the great info. I'm currently having issues uploading animated logos to youtube which look fantastic on my media player but they end up pixilated on youtube. I will give everything you have mentioned a go and see what happens.... Thx again for all the good info. Max
which is the one for dvd's? I have been looking for a very long time and I can't find out which one is right, and I found nothing on the web. This video is as close as I got.
Charles: This depends upon how you transfer them. I've found Image Capture to be the best option. Here's an article that explains how: larryjordan.com/articles/quickly-transfer-photos-and-video-using-image-capture-on-a-mac/ Larry
@@LarryJordanFCP Awesome! Thank you. Hmm. They're imported at 240 fps. I'm on a Mac Pro though I run Windows 10. I may try loading them in Premiere and see if I can export them at 240 fps still. Thanks.
SW: Hmm... Out of sync is generally caused by a audio sample rate mis-match. Check your settings. I use these all the time and have never had a sync problem. (Smile... I'm not saying you didn't, simply that this is not a normal result.) Larry
1:50 Audio
5:30 Video
timestamps for me to refer to! this video is insanely good.
BrandonBraun:
Glad you liked it. Happy to help.
Larry
very understandable only few teachers like you will make us to understand.be blessed sir. mohammed from kenya.
I remember watching this video a few months ago. I was simply unsatisfied with the other tutorials out there and had to dig deeper. And wouldn't you know it, I struck gold.
Damn shame for the SEO not putting it up there. I spent half an hour skimming through my search history just to find it again.
Dragos Udrea:
Thanks for your kind words. I'm glad you liked this.
Larry
Great Explanation! Thank you
Glad it was helpful!
Larry
This man is a legend
Finally something straight to the point and informative. 👌🏼
Tanner:
I'm glad you liked it. Thanks for the kind words,
Larry
Amazing tutorial. No words other than yours to explain how well I understood this. Why does everything have to be so complicated? If the world was simple like this, everyone would understand what I meant. Well done!
Regards,
BlueLixard
Great tutorial - so well explained, thank you
This tutorial is great! Thank you so much! Now I understand what aspect of compression I'm choosing.
Franber16:
Glad you liked it - happy to help.
Larry
Awesome & very detailed tutorial on exporting settings of the videos. Great share. Keep up.
Fab video, thank you.. Fabulous tutorial
This was very helpful, thanks!
Many thanks for sharing this video, this fixed my rendering issues.
Smirking Smirku:
Yay! Happy to help.
Larry
you left render at maximum depth unticked, how come? also why only 2Mbps / 2.2 max as bitrate? surely would be better to render at 15-20
Stallzyx:
According to Adobe, " If you have a GPU, Maximum Bit Depth is irrelevant as you’re already getting that performance if applicable to your media. Turn this off."
And, regarding maximum render quality, again from Adobe: "If you have a GPU, this, too can be turned off. The only reason to turn it on is if you are scaling your images - up or down - and see jagged edges on clearly defined diagonal lines. As of this time, scaling is still CPU-based, and only effects calculated using the CPU are affected by this setting."
Larry
You really now what you're talking about. Thanks
Everything works, especially free, use until it is too late!
Larry you are a legend
solid tips in here--thanks!!!
great tutorial! learned a lot from this. but im having problems with the audio after rendering, the audio is kinda choppy. how to fix this?
Nevlozz:
Hmmm... These settings should not make audio "choppy." Choppiness is generally caused by bandwidth that is too small to properly play a file. But audio files are tiny - compared to video. If the video isn't choppy, the audio shouldn't be choppy either.
Double-check your compression settings. If things still don't work properly contact me directly at larry (at) larryjordan (dot) com.
Larry
Hey Larry, Many thanks for all the great info. I'm currently having issues uploading animated logos to youtube which look fantastic on my media player but they end up pixilated on youtube. I will give everything you have mentioned a go and see what happens.... Thx again for all the good info. Max
thank you
Greatness
wow. thank you.
thanks
which is the one for dvd's?
I have been looking for a very long time and I can't find out which one is right, and I found nothing on the web. This video is as close as I got.
Thanks for this, awesome tutorial!
Good info. Still having trouble exporting my iPhone videos at 240 fps. It downgrades to 60. Any suggestions? Thanks.
Charles:
This depends upon how you transfer them. I've found Image Capture to be the best option. Here's an article that explains how:
larryjordan.com/articles/quickly-transfer-photos-and-video-using-image-capture-on-a-mac/
Larry
@@LarryJordanFCP Awesome! Thank you. Hmm.
They're imported at 240 fps. I'm on a Mac Pro though I run Windows 10. I may try loading them in Premiere and see if I can export them at 240 fps still. Thanks.
i didnt find the match with the source option
Chasrr:
Adobe added it a couple of years ago. This is a checkbox to the right of most video compression settings.
Larry
Well, my first go was pretty good, except the sound was out of sync 🙄
SW:
Hmm... Out of sync is generally caused by a audio sample rate mis-match. Check your settings. I use these all the time and have never had a sync problem. (Smile... I'm not saying you didn't, simply that this is not a normal result.)
Larry
How to set 18 frame rate????????????????????????
TheJautja:
Set the Frame Rate in the Video Inspector to Automatic.
Then, in the box to the right, type "18"
Larry
@@Digitalproductionbuzz TY
@@Digitalproductionbuzz Sorry, I can not find this parameter. The program installed a non-English interface.
@@Digitalproductionbuzz in Windows i cant type frames. Adobe so Adobe
said that stadium I want to explain how to render my father and my thanks disk
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍