Mark;

A .wmv file is (typically) a Microsoft streaming media format found on many web sites.

NOTE:
Common Windows streaming formats: 
.wmv = "Windows Media Video", 
.asf = "Advanced Streaming Format"

The wmv file that you download is only a partial file. This is how they keep the file 
size low.
When you click on a .wmv movie link, you download a partial file, and the rest of the 
file
stays on the server of the original web site. 

When opening a .wmv file, you usually see the "buffering" displayed in the info window.
That's Windows Media Player downloading the rest of the file from the web server that 
originally hosted it.

There is a way to download the complete file, using a 3rd party program like "X-Video 
Converter"
( http://www.xvideoconverter.com/ )
X-Converter automatically downloads the rest of the file, adds it to the partial file 
that you 
have, then saves the new file as either an .avi, .mpg-1/2, VCD/SVCD/DVD, or .wmv/.asf.
X-Video Converter can also convert standard .avi or .mpg into either .wmv or .asf 
files for web
hosting. 

X-Video Converter can also join or split video files into smaller files.
It's a very handy program. I paid around $30.00 for the program.
There is a downloadable "demo" that has a water mark on exported files.
The licensed version doesn't have the water mark.

If you saved the new file as an .avi or .mpg, you can then import the new file 
into AP for editing.

NOTE:
The resulting file is usually many times larger than the original .wmv file.

Here's an example:

1. I have a .wmv file that's 667Kb
2. I load the .wmv into X-Video Converter, and select exporting the video 
    as an uncompressed .avi (best quality)
3. The resulting video file is 87.9 Mb  (that's 132 times larger)
4. I then import the .avi into Premiere, and export the avi using the DivX codec.
5. The new (compressed) file is now 6.2 Mb 
(much smaller than 87.9 Mb, but not nearly as small as the original .wmv file)

Now you can see why some people use the .wmv format.
Leaving much of the file on their server allows the downloaded file to be much smaller.


HTH


Knuck


--- Mark McLaughlin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> 
> Encountered a curious file today, that I've not seen before.
> A .wmv of 352 x 303 pixel dimension. Possibly from PAL source video.
> 
> Requested to make it into a 100x x75 pixel file .wmv for display 
> on a webpage
> 
> I could play the file OK in WMplayer, but could not load it into
> WM Encoder, said file format invalid.
> 
> I loaded the file into a Ppro test project and saved it as 
> a 320 x 240 .wmv file. Could not convert it into 100 x 75 pixel file.
> 
> 
> Has anyone on the list encountered anything like this?
> Anyone from Europe?
> 
> 
> Thanks for any comments
> 
> 
> Mark McLaughlin


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