Hello, I want to upload a video to Youtube soon, but Youtube says it has to be 100mb or less. How do I do this? Also, what motion blur should I use for the best quality? Thanks in advance!!
It's all about bitrate and duration. If your video is 5 minutes long then the combined audio & video bitrate must be below 2730Kbps. If it's 10 minutes long then it must be below 1365Kbps. 20 minutes, below 683Kbps.
3. In Vegas, click on File -> Render As. You will get this dialog:
To render as WMV (which is one option) fill out the dialog as shown and then click on the Custom button. Navigate to the bitrate tab and you should get a screen that looks like this:
You can change the bitrate setting to create larger or smaller files. The higher the bitrate, the larger the file. Double the bitrate and the file will be twice as large.
If you prefer to upload the MPEG-4 files, as Youtube recommends, then change the Render As dialog to this:
and then click the custom button and change the AVERAGE bitrate as shown here:
I watched it (I have it under my favorites). Did you watch some of his other videos, they weren't very clear (More Than A Pinch). That's why I think I'm second guessing it. I followed his steps exactly and I think my video was 120mb. So I guess it's just trial and error. Is there any way to figure how much lower the bitrate needs to be so I don't have to render it 20 times? Thanks for everybody's help!
Only challenge is reading the finer print but maybe that can be cleared up....
Yeah, there is something wrong with the IMG tagging. I left a note for the Sysop. It worked fine for some images I posted yesterday, but everything was distorted this time around.
I think my video was 120mb. So I guess it's just trial and error. Is there any way to figure how much lower the bitrate needs to be so I don't have to render it 20 times?
Well, as I said in my earlier post, the file size is directly proportional to the bitrate and therefore, as I said, if you double the bitrate, you'll double the size.
So, to create a 100 MByte file, take whatever bitrate you used to create a 120 MByte file and multiply it by 100/120 (and then make it a little smaller, just to make sure you get under the 100 MByte YouTube limit).