Yeah this is an issue for me. I was posting only in Quicktime, using 
MP4 compression. But I was getting complaints of people not being 
able to see my stuff. Or there were people who were reluctant to 
install QT on their PC's. I don't have any way to make a WMV because 
I'm using a Mac, and besides I *HATE* WMV's for a lot of reasons. So 
I started posting in straight MP4 format. I thought it would be a 
good cross platforum compromise but it seems that I've gotten more 
complaints about not being able to view my stuff than before. And 
I've discovered that WMP doesn't play MP4's out of the box, which I 
mistakenly thought when I decided to make the switch. So I'm 
thinking of going back to just MOV files for two reasons. One is 
believe it or not I think I get fewer complaints with the Quicktime 
wrapper, and the other is I have been experimenting with 3vx and 
like what I see, and as near as I can tell that only works inside 
the QT wrapper (well I guess there is a version for WMV but you 
already know what I think about that.)

A couple of other random thoughts... When I switched to MP4 iTunes 
had no problems with it. It handled them fine and showed up in the 
directory no problem. But another downside of MP4... My web server 
stats don't show that MP4's are being downloaded. I'm not sure why 
this is. I know they are. Actually it shows them as a general 
percentage of downloads, but they aren't included in the numbers for 
individual file downloads. The MOVs are there but no MP4s... 
weirdness.

Bill Streeter
LO-FI SAINT LOUIS
www.lofistl.com


--- In [email protected], "Steve Watkins" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> I just wish it were simply a case of Apple being snobbish. Its a 
mix
> of business, technical and legal issues which cause these problems.
> 
> For example Microsoft havent done a version of windows media player
> for OS X recently, its an older version that doesnt work so great. 
As
> microsoft control the wmv format, I doubt theres much that can
> legitimately be done about that situation unless microsoft wants to
> play ball.
> 
> Apple dont dominate the home computer market, but Itunes has given
> them a way to get quicktime stuff onto a lot of PCs. HP computers 
that
> I bought for work recently came with itunes preinstalled (I think).
> 
> The PC version of Quicktime 7 may not be quite right yet, but at 
least
> they bothered to release the new version for windows.
> 
> I sympathise with problems trying to encode files of a suitable
> size/quality compromise. Filesize has nothing to do with the mov
> format per-se, but rather whatever settings you are using. The 
easiest
> way for Apple to make this stuff work better for users is to 
improve
> the range of default compression profiles, and make it alla bit
> clearer. Can I ask about your current compression methods like
> Sorenson.... Do you have to set a lot of different settings, or at
> least bitrate, or do you just pick an appropriate encoding profile 
and
> press go?
> 
> .mp4 is still my best hope for the future. I believe it works with
> itunes, and PC support for this file format is improving. Im not
> saying its the best choice right now, but if nothing goes wrong 
then
> it can be a good bridge for this stuff in the future.
> 
> Steve of Elbows
> --- In [email protected], Deirdre Straughan
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > Not having a Mac, I don't have good free tools available for 
QuickTime
> > editing - I even paid for QuickTime Pro, and did not find it
> particularly
> > transparent or powerful, nor is the compression good - 12 mb for 
a
> 90 second
> > file! Nearly 5 for a 30-second file with no audio. Maybe I'm 
doing
> something
> > wrong, but I don't have time to wrestle with it.
> > 
> > Ergo, I use WMV or Flash (I have Sorenson Squeeze for "free" 
because
> I also
> > use it for our corporate website). And there are lots of people 
like
> me in
> > their inability to use QuickTime. If Apple wants to encourage 
video
> > "podcasting" or whatever they want to call it, they will have to 
be less
> > snobbish about formats. Although Mac owners are a large 
percentage of
> > current videobloggers, they are not a large percentage of the 
general
> > computer-using public, many of whom (we hope) will eventually 
start
> > videoblogging.
> > 
> > In further testing, Andreas' hypothesis seems to be borne out: I 
added a
> > couple more MOVs to my RSS feed, and those show up in iTunes, but
> nothing
> > else does.
> > 
> > FWIW, I am rebranding my site as [countries]
> > beginningwithi.com<http://beginningwithi.com>- a choice to be
> > explained in my upcoming newsletter, but probably obvious
> > to anyone who's been following and/or visits my site, however 
briefly.
> > 
> > --
> > best regards,
> > Deirdré Straughan
> > 
> > www.straughan.com <http://www.straughan.com> (personal)
> > www.tvblob.com <http://www.tvblob.com> (work)
> >
>






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