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USING ADOBE MEDIA ENCODER CS4
Encoding media
Last updated 4/29/2012
• Set the export quality setting to match the capture quality setting.
Video Codec or Codec Specifies the codec used to encode the video. The codecs available depend on the format you
choose.
Note: If you cannot find options that your hardware-based codec provides, see the documentation provided by the
hardware manufacturer. Some codecs included with video-capture hardware require that you set compression options in
their own dialog boxes.
Quality Specifies video quality. Generally, higher values increase rendering time and file size. If available, drag the
slider or type a value to affect the exported picture quality. Increasing quality above the original capture quality does
not increase quality, but may result in longer rendering times.
Width or Frame Width Specifies the width of the frame of the output file in pixels.
Height or Frame Height Specifies the height of the frame of the output file in pixels.
Export As Sequence For still-image formats, select this option to export a section of a sequence as a sequentially-
numbered series of still-image files.
Frame Rate Specifies the frame rate of the output file in frames per second. Some codecs support a specific set of frame
rates. Increasing the frame rate may produce smoother motion (depending on the frame rate of the source clip, project,
or sequence) but uses more disk space.
Depth Specifies the color depth in bits per channel (bpc): the number of bits allocated per color channel. Options are
8 Bit, 16 Bit, 24 Bit, or 32 Bit.
Encode Alpha Channel Enables encoding with alpha transparency, which lets you encode video with the background
removed so you can overlay the subject of the video on top of other Flash content. Adobe Media Encoder supports
alpha channel transparency using the following formats/codecs:
• FLV using the On2VP6 codec.
• QuickTime using Apple Animation or Apple None codecs at 32 bit color depth.
• Uncompressed Windows AVI with codec set to None at 32 bit color depth.
TV Standard Conforms the output to the NTSC standard or PAL standard.
Field Order or Field Type Specifies whether the output file will have progressive frames or interlaced fields, and if the
latter, which field will be written first. Progressive is the correct setting for computer display and motion picture film.
Choose Upper First or Lower First when exporting video for an interlaced medium, such as NTSC, or PAL.
Aspect or Pixel Aspect Ratio Specifies pixel aspect ratio. Select one appropriate for the output type. When the pixel
aspect ratio (displayed in parentheses) is 1.0, the output will have square pixels; all others will have rectangular pixels.
Because computers generally display pixels as squares, content using non-square pixel aspect ratios appear stretched
when viewed on a computer but appear with the correct proportions when viewed on a video monitor.
Render At Maximum Depth Specifies whether Adobe Media Encoder renders sequences containing high bit-depth
assets at their full bit depth.
Bitrate Mode or Bitrate Encoding Specifies whether the codec achieves a constant bitrate (CBR) or variable bitrate
(VBR) in the exported file:
• Constant Compresses each frame in the source video to the fixed limit you specify, producing a file with a fixed
data rate. Therefore, frames containing more complex data are compressed more, while less complex frames are
compressed less.
• Variable Constrained Allows the exported file’s data rate to vary within a range you specify. Because a given
amount of compression degrades the quality of a complex image more than it degrades the quality of a simple image,
VBR encoding compresses complex frames less and compresses simple frames more.
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