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#1
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I have a nice (U) video of the first Raptors over Norfolk. If someone
can tell me how to put it up on a web site, I'll be happy to make it publicly available. |
#2
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I have a nice (U) video of the first Raptors over Norfolk. If someone
can tell me how to put it up on a web site, I'll be happy to make it publicly available. How big is it? If you can break it into 10 mb "bites", you can email them to me as attachments, and I'll put 'em on our aviation video page. See it he http://www.alexisparkinn.com/aviation_videos.htm -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination: |
#3
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message
oups.com... I have a nice (U) video of the first Raptors over Norfolk. If someone can tell me how to put it up on a web site, I'll be happy to make it publicly available. How big is it? If you can break it into 10 mb "bites", you can email them to me as attachments, and I'll put 'em on our aviation video page. The best solution is to upload the file to a file download host. Google "file upload download host", or something similar, to find a whole slew of them. I know of a few, but friends report good success with http://www.rapidshare.de These are web sites that allow you to upload any file, and then they give you a URL that you can send to someone else so that they can download. Free access is somewhat limited in that you have to wait to get the file (about a minute), and there may be size limits, storage time limits, and number of download limits as well (depending on the host) But, it avoids having to break the file into pieces, as well as the roughly 30% overhead that comes from sending via email (that's right...if you send a 1MB file in email, it actually costs about 1.3MB in bandwidth and storage space requirements). If you do have to break something into smaller parts, the TAR or RAR formats are relatively common ways to do that. I haven't used it much, but there's a free program called 7-Zip that is supposed to do a good job with both (might only be able to write one or the other of those, but I'm pretty sure it reads both). Hope that helps. Pete |
#4
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Jay Honeck wrote:
I have a nice (U) video of the first Raptors over Norfolk. If someone can tell me how to put it up on a web site, I'll be happy to make it publicly available. How big is it? If you can break it into 10 mb "bites", you can email them to me as attachments, and I'll put 'em on our aviation video page. The file is a PowerPoint (.pps) presentation. It's only 1.7 MB. |
#5
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How big is it?
If you can break it into 10 mb "bites", you can email them to me as attachments, and I'll put 'em on our aviation video page. Not to be touting services, but there is a service called Xdrive (xdrive.com) which lets you "share" a "hard drive on the internet". You create an Xdrive account, and upload files (such as the aviation video) to a folder on it. It acts like a hard drive, and can even be configured to look like one on an internet connected computer. Then you set folder permissions and invite specified other people (by Email address) to "share" it. Those people, to accept the invitation, create their own Xdrive account. Your shared folder is visible to them as if it were on their drive. They have whatever permissions you have set (read, write, delete, share, etc.) and only those. It's nifty and keeps your Email unclogged. The account is free; it requires a (free) AOL or AIM screenname. Jose -- "Never trust anything that can think for itself, if you can't see where it keeps its brain." (chapter 10 of book 3 - Harry Potter). for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#7
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![]() "Skywise" wrote in message ... Stubby wrote in news:7Zudnb5HqJJ- : The file is a PowerPoint (.pps) presentation. You've just reduced your potential audience to a slim number. rant What is it with the urge for people to convert pictures and video to formats other than what they were taken in? What's wrong with JPG? JPG is a "lossy" format. Each time the file is re-saved, it re-compresses and information is lost. or AVI? AVI is relatively UNcompressed and can take up a lot of space. IIRC, AVIs take up about 13Gb per hour. or MOV? Proprietary. Nope. That's not good enough. It's got to be converted to PDF, or PPS, or flash, or shockwave, or one of the dozens of other formats that are the fad of the week that by the time people manage to find a player to view them, is no longer in vogue. If file size is an issue, these formats are already compressible - just re-encode them with increased compression for web use. You may find it interesting that AVID (arguably the most widely used professional video editing platform) encodes material into Quicktime files. FWIW... Jay Beckman PP-ASEL Chandler, AZ Freelance Editor |
#8
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"Jay Beckman" wrote in message
news ![]() rant What is it with the urge for people to convert pictures and video to formats other than what they were taken in? What's wrong with JPG? JPG is a "lossy" format. Each time the file is re-saved, it re-compresses and information is lost. Except that it's likely that the original images were already JPEGs, which someone stuffed into a .ppt file. They could've just provided the original files instead. Or converted it to a more uniformly supported video file, if they really wanted to have control over soundtrack and image transitions. For that matter, even something like Flash would be better than PowerPoint, and allows exactly the same benefits (such as they are). I'm with Skywise...PowerPoint is a downright silly format to distribute online media content. or AVI? AVI is relatively UNcompressed and can take up a lot of space. IIRC, AVIs take up about 13Gb per hour. You misunderstand AVI. AVI is just a container. An AVI that uses 12GB (not 13GB) per hour is in the NTSC-DV format. That is, the raw (mostly) digital stream that comes off a digital video camera. AVI can also contain MPEG4, WMV, DivX, etc. all of which compress very nicely and don't come close to 12GB/hour. or MOV? Proprietary. And PowerPoint isn't? You may find it interesting that AVID (arguably the most widely used professional video editing platform) encodes material into Quicktime files. I'm sure some of their tools use Quicktime for certain things. What that has to do with this discussion, I don't see. Pete |
#9
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![]() "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... "Jay Beckman" wrote in message news ![]() rant What is it with the urge for people to convert pictures and video to formats other than what they were taken in? What's wrong with JPG? JPG is a "lossy" format. Each time the file is re-saved, it re-compresses and information is lost. Except that it's likely that the original images were already JPEGs, which someone stuffed into a .ppt file. They could've just provided the original files instead. Or converted it to a more uniformly supported video file, if they really wanted to have control over soundtrack and image transitions. For that matter, even something like Flash would be better than PowerPoint, and allows exactly the same benefits (such as they are). I'm with Skywise...PowerPoint is a downright silly format to distribute online media content. Agreed. or AVI? AVI is relatively UNcompressed and can take up a lot of space. IIRC, AVIs take up about 13Gb per hour. You misunderstand AVI. AVI is just a container. An AVI that uses 12GB (not 13GB) per hour is in the NTSC-DV format. That is, the raw (mostly) digital stream that comes off a digital video camera. AVI can also contain MPEG4, WMV, DivX, etc. all of which compress very nicely and don't come close to 12GB/hour. Ok, noted. I've only worked with video that has been transferred straight off tape. I've not ever heard of AVI as a "wrapper" for other formats. or MOV? Proprietary. And PowerPoint isn't? No, you're right, it is as well. You may find it interesting that AVID (arguably the most widely used professional video editing platform) encodes material into Quicktime files. I'm sure some of their tools use Quicktime for certain things. What that has to do with this discussion, I don't see. It's the one file format that didn't get mentioned...and I'm pretty sure most people don't equate Quicktime with pro-level work. I just tossed that out as an "oh by the way." Jay B |
#10
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Microsoft does offer a free PowerPoint viewer
Download details: PowerPoint Viewer 2003 PowerPoint Viewer 2003 lets you view full-featured presentations created in PowerPoint 97 and later versions. http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/d...displaylang=en - 33k - Cached - Similar pages http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/d...displaylang=en "Skywise" wrote in message ... | Stubby wrote in news:7Zudnb5HqJJ- | : | | The file is a PowerPoint (.pps) presentation. | | You've just reduced your potential audience to a slim number. | | rant | What is it with the urge for people to convert pictures and | video to formats other than what they were taken in? What's | wrong with JPG? or AVI? or MOV? Nope. That's not good enough. | It's got to be converted to PDF, or PPS, or flash, or shockwave, | or one of the dozens of other formats that are the fad of the | week that by the time people manage to find a player to view | them, is no longer in vogue. If file size is an issue, these | formats are already compressible - just re-encode them with | increased compression for web use. | /rant | | BTW, this rant was not directed specifically at you, Stubby. | | Brian | -- | http://www.skywise711.com - Lasers, Seismology, Astronomy, Skepticism | Seismic FAQ: http://www.skywise711.com/SeismicFAQ/SeismicFAQ.html | Quake "predictions": http://www.skywise711.com/quakes/EQDB/index.html | Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes? |
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