Exporting from Adobe

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Garridy
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Exporting from Adobe

Post by Garridy » Sun Feb 05, 2006 1:01 am

I have taken an avi file and edited it in Adobe Premere Elements 2.0 and everything works fine. I even play the whole movie through to make sure. Then when i try to play my edited avi after exporting it, it will stutter at weird places. Not always in the same spots either and sometimes not as bad as others. Any ideas?
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Pwolf
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Post by Pwolf » Sun Feb 05, 2006 1:08 am

what codec did you export it to... could just be that your computer is too slow to decode it at realtime.

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Garridy
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Post by Garridy » Sun Feb 05, 2006 1:35 am

How do i check what codec im exporting to?
My computer is pretty new so i dont think thats the problem.
I love to wear absurd and totally impractical garments. What's more, I derive great pleasure from spending time with women for no apparent reason.
I'm just that kind of person. - Sousuke Sagara

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Pwolf
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Post by Pwolf » Sun Feb 05, 2006 1:50 am

well i know your problem now... you don't know how to use the program...

when you export click the "Settings" button to change the settings.


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Garridy
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Post by Garridy » Sun Feb 05, 2006 2:12 am

Which codec would you suggest? There are a lot of them.
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Post by Pwolf » Sun Feb 05, 2006 4:16 am

darthgamer wrote:Which codec would you suggest? There are a lot of them.
depends what you want to do... i always export from premiere to huffyuv then ecode to xvid in vdub later...

Pwolf

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Post by Hauntedcow » Tue Feb 07, 2006 12:44 am

Pwolf wrote:
darthgamer wrote:Which codec would you suggest? There are a lot of them.
depends what you want to do... i always export from premiere to huffyuv then ecode to xvid in vdub later...

Pwolf
I use that also for videos that I publish on the web in AVI format.

For Quicktime format, I use Sorenson 3 codec and use quicktime pro to convert it to streaming H.264

For films or video I am exporting for DVDs, I use Microsoft DV (NTSC) which produces a very large file for DVD quality.

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Post by Gox777 » Sat Feb 11, 2006 6:57 pm

As do as Pwolf does...

Export the video from premiere using the huffy codec for video and uncompressed audio

(get huffy at http://neuron2.net/www.math.berkeley.ed ... ffyuv.html)
(download the DLL of version of 1.3.1 and follow the rest of the instructions on that page)

Next, Open the huffy avi file in a program called Virtual Dub
(get it at http://virtualdub.sourceforge.net/)
Once you open it up, you can go to "streams" to choose an audio compression setting. Next, save the video out of virual dub and choose Xvid as the video compression.

You could also export it out of Premiere directly to Xvid, but premiere has pretty crappy options when it comes to audio compression. >_<

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