How come a-m-v.org doesn't use .ZIP format?
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- Joined: Fri Feb 13, 2004 9:53 pm
How come a-m-v.org doesn't use .ZIP format?
If you encoded every single video here that would reduce the space tremendously and also save bandwidth. I mean, i had a 140 mb video and i zipped it to 53 megs. Seeing as how windows XP comes equipped with a zip program and WinZip is free (www.winzip.com) Is there a reason why they want the raw file?
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THere are means of detecting what is inside a zip file. Most, at least most AV programs that i know off, can detect and scan the files packaged inside a zip file to figure out the contents inside. This is of course unless someone encrypts the zip file with something non-standard.
However, the site doesn't need to zip files yet. I remember Phade saying that there's still plenty of space left on the storage.
However, the site doesn't need to zip files yet. I remember Phade saying that there's still plenty of space left on the storage.
- godix
- a disturbed member
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Videos are already compressed before being uploaded. If zipping up your video saves significant amounts of space that's a sure sign that you did a poor job when you compressed the video and need to go redo it. I suggest, as always, to Read <a href=http://www.a-m-v.org/guides/avtech31/>ErMaC & AbsoluteDestiny's Friendly AMV Guides</a>. The entire idea behind lossy codecs like Xvid, Mpeg, etc is that they produce smaller files than lossless codecs like zip and if they don't then you're doing something wrong.
- Phade
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Hey Dann3,
What the others have said is correct. If you've encoded your video nicely, zip will have very little effect on the final file size. Some codecs are built that way so that the computer processor has to do less work to display the video at the expense of larger file size. Try zipping some of the better videos here on the site. The zipped file should be very close in size to the original.
After a year of using the local storage Golden Donut server, the capacity is only 46% full. This means that we have another whole year until we've filled it up. By then, we should have enough saved up to triple capacity at less cost than the original storage machine.
I hope this helps.
Phade.
What the others have said is correct. If you've encoded your video nicely, zip will have very little effect on the final file size. Some codecs are built that way so that the computer processor has to do less work to display the video at the expense of larger file size. Try zipping some of the better videos here on the site. The zipped file should be very close in size to the original.
After a year of using the local storage Golden Donut server, the capacity is only 46% full. This means that we have another whole year until we've filled it up. By then, we should have enough saved up to triple capacity at less cost than the original storage machine.
I hope this helps.
Phade.
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- Declan_Vee
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- Bakadeshi [AuN Studios]
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All of the mpeg4 variant codecs (In fact I think any .AVI file period) will exhibit this problem. Only the mpegs will still play if incomplete. THis is because the Index for the file (If my understanding is correct) is put at the end of the file, a limitation with the AVI format. Some thirdparty programs (like Divfix) can rebuild this index for you though so you can still watch the incomplete file.Declan_Vee wrote:Also if there is an error in the download (it can happen, even from the donut) the zipped file is totally unusable. I've also noticed the same thing to happen with DivX5 (unwatchable).
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Just to clarify:Bakadeshi [AuN Studios] wrote:All of the mpeg4 variant codecs (In fact I think any .AVI file period) will exhibit this problem. Only the mpegs will still play if incomplete. THis is because the Index for the file (If my understanding is correct) is put at the end of the file, a limitation with the AVI format. Some thirdparty programs (like Divfix) can rebuild this index for you though so you can still watch the incomplete file.Declan_Vee wrote:Also if there is an error in the download (it can happen, even from the donut) the zipped file is totally unusable. I've also noticed the same thing to happen with DivX5 (unwatchable).
This is a container issue, not a codec issue.
AVIs have this problem, but even then, they're still playable if you have a player that is smart enough to know how to reconstruct the index block. It has nothing to with what standard you encode your video stream to.