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Sep 6 2010 03:15pm
Does anyone know if there is a way to maintain better quality of videos uploaded to Flickr?

This video was in 1080p on my computer, but this certainly isn't.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/dleberfinger/4964103819/
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Sep 6 2010 03:35pm
Dunno for sure, maybe because it has to be 1080 points of width?

Or flickr has just a limit?

Otherwise you can upload it on youtube and post the link beneath your video in flickr.

On a side note, looks like your video is low on frame rate, maybe you should speed it up a little?
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Sep 6 2010 05:34pm
Quote (AlPi @ Sep 6 2010 04:35pm)
Dunno for sure, maybe because it has to be 1080 points of width?

Or flickr has just a limit?

Otherwise you can upload it on youtube and post the link beneath your video in flickr.

On a side note, looks like your video is low on frame rate, maybe you should speed it up a little?


It's a time lapse, each frame is .1 seconds long. So that's only 10fps, that's why it seems a bit slow. I only had around 850 frames because my battery crapped out.
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Sep 7 2010 12:58am
Quote (kratos @ 7 Sep 2010 00:34)
It's a time lapse, each frame is .1 seconds long. So that's only 10fps, that's why it seems a bit slow. I only had around 850 frames because my battery crapped out.


It's not about being slow, it's about being smooth.

Normal video broadcast is 24 frames per second, that's why your video seems to lag.

You can take pictures with an higher rate if the outcome is too fast at 24fps.

Also, you can power your camera with a cable if you have a chance to.

Member
Posts: 3,373
Joined: Dec 2 2006
Gold: 0.56
Sep 7 2010 04:16am
Quote (AlPi @ Sep 7 2010 01:58am)
It's not about being slow, it's about being smooth.

Normal video broadcast is 24 frames per second, that's why your video seems to lag.

You can take pictures with an higher rate if the outcome is too fast at 24fps.

Also, you can power your camera with a cable if you have a chance to.


I know... And I don't think there is anyway to power my camera from my computer while it's shooting.
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