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Post by Martin Brundle - Martinfly on Mar 31, 2022 18:40:38 GMT
Hello,
I've heard that filming/producing a clip on 720 HD, but with a higher bitrate (12.000 or even 14.000 k/ps), is getting a stellar quality. And if done properly, there's not that big a difference with a 1080 file.
Is that true?
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Post by shadrack on Apr 24, 2022 22:04:56 GMT
Are you watching the video on a medium or small screen like a phone or even a medium sized TV/monitor? If so, then yeah, you're probably not going to be able to tell the difference. Is the scene dark or lack a lot of fine detail? If so, then yeah, you're probably not going to be able to tell the difference. Are you compressing the raw video with a lossy compression algorithm tuned to strongly prefer high quality over small size? If so, then yeah, you're probably not going to be able to tell the difference. Are you just looking at a 720 video stream in isolation and deciding if you think it's "stellar quality" or not (as opposed to doing a side-by-side comparison to an otherwise identical 1080 video stream)? If so, then yeah, you're probably not going to be able to tell the difference.
I could go on, but the point is, there's no one "right" answer to this question. In certain circumstances, yes. In other circumstances, no. It's all subjective. It all depends.
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Post by Martin Brundle - Martinfly on Jun 2, 2022 1:08:08 GMT
Are you watching the video on a medium or small screen like a phone or even a medium sized TV/monitor? If so, then yeah, you're probably not going to be able to tell the difference. Are you compressing the raw video with a lossy compression algorithm tuned to strongly prefer high quality over small size?
I know where you're coming from. I'm watching these files on a lossless format, and on a medium-sized HD TV. They are professionally filmed videoclips, and they look 100% fine.
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Post by thekindercarebear on Aug 4, 2022 16:41:42 GMT
all I know is as of 2.5 years ago or so, the council of youtube snobbery no longer consider 720P as HD.
=/
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