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How to Compress Video for YouTube (5 Vital Tips) July 18, 2007

Posted by Nalts in : Making Videos, YouTube , trackback

Courtesy of ZackScott, here’s a nice piece from CrunchGear about how to ensure your video is optimized for YouTube.

  1. Make your file a .mov or .mp4.
  2. Set it to the YouTube-native size of 320×240 (aka QVGA).
  3. Expect letterboxing if your HD camera shoots at a different aspect ration than the 4:3 that is 320×240. No way out of that unless you want to crop or stretch (yuck).
  4. Make it as “bit-rich” as you can. Use a bitrate as high as you can up to 1200kbps (overkill). Somewhere between 700kbps and 1000kbps should do the trick nicely.
  5. Use the MP3 audio codec (either CBR of VBR), which should be standard on your editor.

Do this and your video will look better and encode faster (reduce post-to-view lag).

Also note that there’s software out there that has automated YouTube features, such as VirtualDub. These programs are great time-savers if you’re and hardcore YouTuber, and they should be considered.

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Comments»

1. tubedude - July 18, 2007

hmmmm,adding new posts before responding to comments on the old posts? I guess you really are a celebrity now ;-)

2. tubedude - July 18, 2007

* my bad,looks like u just did!

3. jischinger - July 18, 2007

good tips! thanks

4. sukatra - July 18, 2007

is this for mac or pc?

5. steve - July 18, 2007

Thanks for the tips Nalts & zack scott.I thought this was rather interesting,its from youtubes terms of use,User Submissions and Conduct,near the end of paragraph C: “You understand and agree, however, that YouTube may retain, but not display, distribute, or perform, server copies of User Submissions that have been removed or deleted.” …………….WTF?

6. sukatra - July 18, 2007

Steve - i think this would cover keeping copies of deleted/removed videos where there is a question of copyright infringement (i.e., the viacom suit).

7. steve - July 19, 2007

oic-thanks sukatra {:-O

8. Davideo - July 20, 2007

I followed the instructions to the letter but i get the same quality altho i guess i kinda do what the advice says anyhow but the re-sizing to 320 x 240 does make very small file sizes without any apparent effect on the quality of the uploaded vid whcih is a great thing really.

POOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO just thought i would add that on the end.

9. sukatra - July 20, 2007

sounds to me like davideo has a 2 year old living in his house.

10. nalts - July 21, 2007

I love these comments

11. VelvetElvis01 - July 22, 2007

A lot of the new versions of editing software are incorporating export options specifically for online video. I know the new Adobe CS3 Suite will have the ability to export to the High Def H.264 codec and it will be interesting to see how YT vids start to look using that. Although i think at the moment u can only access the H.264 encoded ones from Apple TV & Apple iPhone’s.

12. aaron1646 - July 26, 2007

Nalts, thanks for the tips. Do you have any idea how to ensure that your content gets ported to the Apple TV version of YouTube?

13. aaron1646 - July 27, 2007

Also, on my Apple TV, I can watch your content in widescreen on my 16:9 TV. But were those videos still uploaded as 320 x 240 letterbox? Or is this a secret of the “partners program”???

14. juani - March 23, 2008

Hi guys, YouTube has come up with new format settings for displaying videos at high quality. Still there is a catch you need to know. that I read in this article:

YouTube Hight Definition
http://www.squidoo.com/youtubehd

15. jischinger - March 23, 2008

“The trick is to append &fmt=6 or &fmt=18 to the end of the URL. For instance, &fmt=6 bumps the resolution from 320×240 to 448×336. Add &fmt=18 and you get an MP4-encoded version, with better audio and a 480×360 resolution.”

we already got it!
[click]

16. dano - April 25, 2008

For some reason, with the videos that I’ve uploaded, when I view the High Quality Version, the audio becomes noticeably distorted. The audio sounds nice and clean in the low quality version, but it distorted in the high quality version.

Anyone know what would cause that?

17. Torley - May 6, 2008

@dano: It’s sad this has continued to be a bug for months. I noticed it way back too, e.g., http://torley.com/5-youtube-problems-bugs-that-bother-torley and I wish YouTube would respond to the numerous support inquiries I’ve sent, as I overall like them but defects like this are an obvious step back… how did anyone miss this? Odd, better picture but worse audio. :(