As I understand it, youtube always re-encode material that is
uploaded. So be careful not to compress your videos too much before
upload. This might also help improve visual quality. Not that I
noticed any choppiness in those videos... *grin*

/ Fredrik


2009/12/11 Arjo Rozendaal <[email protected]>:
> Hi Mark,
>
> Nice to see the animations. I recognize the choppy effect, I had that
> several times in animations. The best solution I could find so far is to
> encode a lossless movie in AE and then use Quicktime to create a H264 movie
> to show on youtube. The quicktime encoder is much better.
> But some animations seem to suffer much more from the effect. Maybe because
> in a fly through animation too much of the sequence changes from frame to
> frame.
> This animations shows the effect a bit still. I used the AE plugin "Real
> Smart Motion Blur" to simulate motion blur. Which helped quite a bit to
> reduce the stuttering.
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uWnT7DcheB8
>
> However the next animation caused a lot less problems, while it's quite the
> same type of animation.
> But this is a wmv, maybe wmv plays better than quicktime on Windows.
>
> http://www.xs4all.nl/~joly/temp/flythrough.wmv
>
> I haven't found the ultimate answer yet.
>
> Arjo.
>
>> -----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
>> Van: [email protected] [mailto:owner-
>> [email protected]] Namens Mark
>> Verzonden: donderdag 10 december 2009 23:26
>> Aan: [email protected]
>> Onderwerp: new channel opened
>>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I just created a new account on youtube and uploaded some animations.
>> http://www.youtube.com/Athanor3d
>> I hope to add some V7-rendered stuff in the not-too-distant future ;)
>>
>> They become a bit choppy, any idea why? Compression, or did I do some
>> timecode stuff wrong (After Effects 6.5)...? I'll have to check that
>> out.
>>
>> regards,
>> -Mark H
>
>

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