![]() It is very well explained and I learned some things I had no idea about, like the ‘tolerances’ associated with various elements when using View Range. There is a great video on View Range by Paul Aubin at the link below here: ![]() Uncategorized animation, guide, movie maker, rendering, tutorials, virtualdub No Comments It started out at about 1.2 gb, then VirtualDub compressed it to around 225 mb, then Movie Maker compressed it to about 20 mb.It took about a week for one workstation to produce this:įeel free to share links to any files you upload to Youtube by commenting on this blog post. Once uploaded, you can now share the link code with Clients or others who may like to view the animation.īelow is an example of a 1000 frame rendered animation we recently produced at Dimond Architects.This may take a while, so just wait patiently (or do some other work!) Select the compressed video you have created, and upload it.Now, open your browser and login to your Youtube account.This should reduce the file to a manageable size. I recommend choosing ‘Best quality for playback on my computer’.Choose a filename and location and click Next. Drag the file into the storyboard at the bottom.Import the combined file into the collections. Now go File – Save as AVI and create your combined and partly compressed AVI file.In VirtualDub, go to Audio and choose ‘No Audio’.In VirtualDub, go to Video – Compression and I recommend using the ‘Cinepak Codec by Radius’ if you have it.Do this however many times is need to append all parts to the original file. Press Ctrl-Right arrow (this takes you to the end of the file), then go File – Append AVI Segment… and choose the next part. ![]()
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