[sumo] Sumo Video Technical Question

Mike Charlton mikekchar at gmail.com
Fri Mar 9 08:50:31 EST 2007


I'd second this suggestion not to use RV.  It really is a problematic
format.  If size is a problem, h264 probably has the best compression,
but it's CPU intensive on playback so some older machines might
not be able to handle it at high resolutions.  Another way to
reduce size is simply to keep the resolution down.  I was looking
at some sumo video the other day that must have been something
like 160x100.  It was small, but still perfectly enjoyable.  And at
1/16 the size of 640x400 it certainly takes up less room on the
hard disk.

If you need a hand converting videos, I probably have some time this
basho.  I can volunteer to do some converting.

      MikeC

On 3/8/07, Clay Holden <cholden at kappa-joe.com> wrote:
> On 3/8/07 6:34 AM, "Ngozi Robinson" <ngozirobinson at hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Hi All,
> >
> > I'm getting ramped up to post the videos for the upcoming Basho and had a
> > technical question maybe someone in the group could help me with.
> >
> > Does anyone know of a software for OSX that will allow me to convert video
> > files to RealPlayer format?  The codex I was using doesn't jive with my
> > machine and I thought it would be nicer for people not to have to load the
> > large large QuickTime files.
>
> Long (semi-)technical reply here, please delete if uninterested...
>
> *Please* avoid converting to RealPlayer format. Even the free version of
> their player is filled with spyware, and even on OSX. You have to read over
> the install log when you are finished installing it and disable or delete a
> bunch of junk.
>
> First of all, what format are you going to be capturing the video files in?
> That will make a difference in your options.
>
> Depending on the answer, I would recommend either D-Vision 3 or ffmpegX for
> converting to .mp4 or .avi or even h264 files. Any of these will be smaller
> than QuickTime files, and you can produce end results considerably better
> into the bargain.
>
> ffmpegX has a learning curve, but is incredibly powerful. D-Vision 3 is very
> easy to use, is dependable, has a number of options you can tweak, and
> produces high-quality end-results.
>
> Forty-Two is probably easier to use, but the results are not as
> configurable. MPEG2 Works has many options, but is not freeware or
> shareware, and may not suit your purposes anyway, though it is a very good
> tool when called for.
>
> ffmpegX can convert *from* RealVideo to more reasonable formats, but I don't
> believe it works the other way around.
>
> Anyway, basically please don't convert to RealPlayer files, even if you find
> a way to do so. The quality is horrible, and the corporation is evil.
>
> If you need more info on any of the above, feel free to write me off-list,
> as I am willing to offer some help, but am reasonably certain that nobody
> on-list would want to read it ;-)
>
> In terms of locating the OSX tools mentioned above, Google is your friend.
>
> Sorry if this doesn't answer the question you asked in the first place...
>
> Best regards,
>
> Clay
>
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