Re: Tournament Video Blogging



OK, great -- good info -- thanks.

I can't do the streaming, for a variety of reasons, so it would be download.
Actually, I'm not thinking about showing games, as much as providing
impressions, news of the brackets, good matchups, and action, and perhaps a
few brief player interviews. I'm not sure how many people would be
interested in viewing, but I think it might be something fun to try and do.

Lou Figueroa

"Aunty Dan" <auntydan@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:11f7mlhqfdmn4fa@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> See DHakala suggestions below for some free software. As for size and
> compression, there are 2 basic options, download or streaming. A download
> would be a simple single file (.MPG, .AVI, .WMV and .MOV are the most
> popular formats.) All of these formats have some form of built-in
> compression, so when you record you can choose the option you want to get
> the file to a size the webhost will allow. (Depending on the software the
> compression options may be listed as either compression, codec, quality or
> frame rate.)
>
> Once a single downloadable file has been created you can apply additional
> compression by using a tool like WinZip or WinRar. However most video
> formats that have a lot of compression applied (EG .WMV) will not compress
> appreciably more using WinZip so it is usually not worth bothering.
>
> The second option is to stream the video file. This requires several more
> steps - First you have to capture the file in a format that supports
> streaming (Microsoft's .WMV is good for this) or use a convesion program
to
> turn an existing file into a stream. (Supplied with the web server
streaming
> software usually) Secondly the web server has to have a streaming media
> service installed to allow people to view the files as opposed to just a
> download link. You'll have to ask the ISP and/or person running the
> webserver where you intend to host these files if they have this. If they
do
> ask them for an FAQ on how to create a video file suitable for their
> particular server.
>
> For maximum compression one of the best current tools is DivX, and you can
> download their tools from www.divx.com. However the downside of this is it
> requires a lot more CPU power on the part of the client PC, so don't use
> this if you want as wide an audience for your video as possible.
>
> The biggest issue with video of Pool is maintaining enough clarity and
> resolution to make it worthwhile doing. In my experience a 5 minute clip
> covering a single game would need to be around 20-30MB in size (using a
> high-compression format like .WMV) if you want it to look good.
>
> --
> Aunty Dan
> --
> "For 'tis the sport to have the engineer
> Hoist with his own petard."
> - W. Shakespeare
> ------------------------------------------
> "lfigueroa" <lfigueroa@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:ubPIe.69202$5N3.60928@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> > OK, thanks for the help, Aunty.
> >
> > Well, it'd be a Windows laptop. I was thinking that there must be some
> > freeware that could help do this.
> >
> > I was also wondering what the best/easiest setup would be for the camera
> > work -- the webcam sounds like a good option, but don't want to go too
> > far
> > down the scale in terms of picture and sound quality (doss a webcam even
> > record sound?) What about the length of the segment -- is a minute or
> > two
> > doable, or is that too long?
> >
> > Also, wouldn't the file have to be zipped or compressed somehow to get
it
> > on
> > the web? And then what about posting it? What kind of capabilities
does
> > the host site need?
> >
> > Lou Figueroa
> > so many questions
> > so little technical knowledge
> >
> > "Aunty Dan" <auntydan@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
> > news:11f7e18nhel2seb@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >> Is it a Mac or Windows laptop? Your options on how easy this is depend
on
> >> the software and hardware you use, which is dependant on your PC
> >> platform.
> >> Most modern Macs come with video capture and editing software out of
the
> > box
> >> that is supposed to be easy to use. On a Windows laptop you have a lot
> > more
> >> choice but will have to buy it yourself unless the manufacturer has
> > bundled
> >> some software with either the laptop or you video camera.
> >>
> >> One option if you are traveling with a laptop is not to use a "real"
> > video
> >> camera but instead get a USB webcam and record directly on the PC. This
> > will
> >> be lower quality but very convenient as the Web cam will not need tapes
> >> or
> > a
> >> separate battery and power supply. They are also small and light and
easy
> > to
> >> mount on a wall or pillar if you can get close. There are even wireless
> >> models that would allow you to position them almost anywhere whilst
> >> recording from the stands.
> >>
> >> Another option for really simple transfer is a new range of video
cameras
> >> that record directly to mini-DVD disks. You just pop the disk out of
the
> >> camera and into the PC and copy it over. Your editing options are
limited
> >> but it is very simple and convenient.
> >>
> >> --
> >> Aunty Dan
> >> --
> >> "For 'tis the sport to have the engineer
> >> Hoist with his own petard."
> >> - W. Shakespeare
> >> ------------------------------------------
> >> "lfigueroa" <lfigueroa@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
> >> news:xCOIe.551784$cg1.441484@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >> > Does anyone here have experience with shooting 1-2 minutes of video,
> >> > downloading it to a laptop, maybe doing a bit of work to it, and then
> >> > posting it to the web?
> >> >
> >> > I may be traveling to a big tournament in the not too distant future
> >> > and
> >> > was
> >> > wondering how feasible (spelled: how hard) it would be to do this a
few
> >> > times over the course of a multi-day event.
> >> >
> >> > Lou Figueroa
> >> > Jeanie Moos
> >> > is my hero
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>



.



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