Whats better in term of quality and speed I know 3ds u need to only be able to watch 10min parts while moonshell u need to convert to dpg.
You should be fine with something between 500-1000kbps when it comes to bitrate. 5000 is overkill, unless it's HD.3DS video is higher resolution, widescreen and has much better playback controls, even letting you adjust the speed of the video, or reverse it.
The 10 minute sections is a drawback of course but it's forgiveable.
One downside is that good quality videos made for 3DS photo seem to get very large in filesize. That might just be me setting the data-rate and framerate too high though, 5000 might be overkill but the program I used doesn't indicate what a quality from high to low would be.
Yeah, the program defaults to 6000 when you go to the advanced settings, which is the only way to set the framerate.You should be fine with something between 500-1000kbps when it comes to bitrate. 5000 is overkill, unless it's HD.3DS video is higher resolution, widescreen and has much better playback controls, even letting you adjust the speed of the video, or reverse it.
The 10 minute sections is a drawback of course but it's forgiveable.
One downside is that good quality videos made for 3DS photo seem to get very large in filesize. That might just be me setting the data-rate and framerate too high though, 5000 might be overkill but the program I used doesn't indicate what a quality from high to low would be.
I'll have to disagree with you on the Info Display thing. Yeah, it's still there... if you watch using autoplay. Go watch it using Edit Video, then tell me the Info Display thing is useless. I've been doing it since... well, since Video Playback was out.i dont know but is there any way to get rid of that fukin obnoxious date and random # in the bottom right of the screen with 3ds video playback ?i tried everything , even when you go into settings and turn off info display its still there
wtf does that # next to the date even represent? its not the video length of the video your watching , it dont move or count down or up, so wtf is it, i assume its either the amount of total video shot stored on the sd, or the amount of space left on the sd for video, but which is it ? and why put it there , thats really a retarded place to put it
especially when you cant even get rid of the info display overlay over the video,why not put that shit on the lower screen instead of having it obstruct the video?
and do videos converted with the 3ds video converter still have the annoying date stamp a the bottom or just videos shot through the 3ds cameras
Based on my experience with the 3DS Video Converter, 1000kbps (per stream) is insufficient, quality-wise. Any sort of movement would result in sharp pixelation. The best I've found is at least 2000kbps per stream, pushing it higher for faster-paced films (action scenes suffer the worst), up to 3000kbps per stream. On 3D movies, you should have at least 4000kbps video bitrate total, and around 6000kbps total for pixel-perfect video even with fast scenes. Cut the bitrates by half for 2D movies.You should be fine with something between 500-1000kbps when it comes to bitrate. 5000 is overkill, unless it's HD.
oh ok but why 24 hour military time? i hate that why not normal 12 hour time and no option to toggle the display off,im not saying its useless i didnt know that was the time next to the date,im ok with that ,just be nice to be able to turn it off or move it to the bottom screen, also another annoying thing is that it cuts off the borders when you play a 3d video , why not just have it full screen? whats with the fuzzy border ,i hope they have a fw update to improve the video record appI'll have to disagree with you on the Info Display thing. Yeah, it's still there... if you watch using autoplay. Go watch it using Edit Video, then tell me the Info Display thing is useless. I've been doing it since... well, since Video Playback was out.i dont know but is there any way to get rid of that fukin obnoxious date and random # in the bottom right of the screen with 3ds video playback ?i tried everything , even when you go into settings and turn off info display its still there
wtf does that # next to the date even represent? its not the video length of the video your watching , it dont move or count down or up, so wtf is it, i assume its either the amount of total video shot stored on the sd, or the amount of space left on the sd for video, but which is it ? and why put it there , thats really a retarded place to put it
especially when you cant even get rid of the info display overlay over the video,why not put that shit on the lower screen instead of having it obstruct the video?
and do videos converted with the 3ds video converter still have the annoying date stamp a the bottom or just videos shot through the 3ds cameras
That time you're so pissed about? That's basically the time stamp (date & time the video/image was taken). If you have been taking pictures and videos, you would have seen and noticed it on them.
I do agree with you on putting those details solely on the top screen is a pretty tard move though. At least they should have made it so that you can put it out of the way (touch screen).
oh ok thanks ,yeah i meant vids taken with the camera ,i wasnt sure if it did it with converted videosMilitary time lets you not have to add AM or PM.
What do you mean about "cutting borders"? That only happens on images/videos taken with the 3DS. Vids converted and images not taken with the camera doesn't have these "fuzzy borders".
Actually, what video codec does that converter use? 500-1000kbps is decent as long as it's a relatively modern codec. Even DivX/XviD will work decently at that bitrate. If it's an obsolete codec like MPEG-2 then yeah 1000kbps would be too little.Based on my experience with the 3DS Video Converter, 1000kbps (per stream) is insufficient, quality-wise. Any sort of movement would result in sharp pixelation. The best I've found is at least 2000kbps per stream, pushing it higher for faster-paced films (action scenes suffer the worst), up to 3000kbps per stream. On 3D movies, you should have at least 4000kbps video bitrate total, and around 6000kbps total for pixel-perfect video even with fast scenes. Cut the bitrates by half for 2D movies.You should be fine with something between 500-1000kbps when it comes to bitrate. 5000 is overkill, unless it's HD.
I was speaking from experience. It didn't matter what codec it was using-- those settings worked best for me. MJPEG, from what I remember, is something like animated GIFs, except each frame is a JPEG layer, and of course, GIFs only usually do a few seconds worth of frames at most. MJPEGs are like full length GIFs, in that regard.Actually, what video codec does that converter use? 500-1000kbps is decent as long as it's a relatively modern codec. Even DivX/XviD will work decently at that bitrate. If it's an obsolete codec like MPEG-2 then yeah 1000kbps would be too little.Based on my experience with the 3DS Video Converter, 1000kbps (per stream) is insufficient, quality-wise. Any sort of movement would result in sharp pixelation. The best I've found is at least 2000kbps per stream, pushing it higher for faster-paced films (action scenes suffer the worst), up to 3000kbps per stream. On 3D movies, you should have at least 4000kbps video bitrate total, and around 6000kbps total for pixel-perfect video even with fast scenes. Cut the bitrates by half for 2D movies.You should be fine with something between 500-1000kbps when it comes to bitrate. 5000 is overkill, unless it's HD.
Edit: MJPEG? No clue what kind of bitrates are good for that.
Yeah, I figured that much. But that doesn't really say much about what kind of bitrates to expect. JPEG files are pretty small in low bitrates, but if you want the quality to be good they're not, still I don't know what that translates to in video. Recommended bitrates vary widely by codec, some are more efficient and let you use a much lower bitrate to get the same quality as other codecs. So there isn't really a codec-independent magic bitrate that will make your files look the same quality regardless of codec.I was speaking from experience. It didn't matter what codec it was using-- those settings worked best for me. MJPEG, from what I remember, is something like animated GIFs, except each frame is a JPEG layer, and of course, GIFs only usually do a few seconds worth of frames at most. MJPEGs are like full length GIFs, in that regard.Actually, what video codec does that converter use? 500-1000kbps is decent as long as it's a relatively modern codec. Even DivX/XviD will work decently at that bitrate. If it's an obsolete codec like MPEG-2 then yeah 1000kbps would be too little.Based on my experience with the 3DS Video Converter, 1000kbps (per stream) is insufficient, quality-wise. Any sort of movement would result in sharp pixelation. The best I've found is at least 2000kbps per stream, pushing it higher for faster-paced films (action scenes suffer the worst), up to 3000kbps per stream. On 3D movies, you should have at least 4000kbps video bitrate total, and around 6000kbps total for pixel-perfect video even with fast scenes. Cut the bitrates by half for 2D movies.You should be fine with something between 500-1000kbps when it comes to bitrate. 5000 is overkill, unless it's HD.
Edit: MJPEG? No clue what kind of bitrates are good for that.
Nobody's thought of that yet, subs. I have nudged the idea on to NekuSoul though, and he's got something being worked on right now, but it requires he restructure the whole converter, methinks. Might take a while.is there a 3ds video converter that splits into 10mins AND hardcode subs. I have the srt file just need to put it in. I hate moonshells video quality.