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Old     (flattirenotube)      Join Date: May 2007       12-19-2011, 8:41 AM Reply   
So I have been playing with some editing in Final Cut Pro X, and had a question to the other users out there. I made a 4 minute video with footage off of my GoPro, and it ended up being over 1.2 GB in size. Obviously with this size I cannot post to YouTube or anything really. Is there a way to compress the .mov file, or what do I need to do to make it smaller?
Old     (SangerTom)      Join Date: Aug 2010       12-19-2011, 2:51 PM Reply   
Try Vimeo - I think they allow bigger files. Plus - as people on the board helped me earlier in the year, YouTube will not let you post if you use music that has a copyright - Vimeo doesn't check.
Old     (Shooter)      Join Date: Apr 2010       12-19-2011, 4:32 PM Reply   
Vimeo will allow HD video, but limits how often you can post large files unless you pay for membership. I like Vimeo better than YouTube.

I'm not fimilar with Final Cut, but IMovie will allow you to choose the movie size...small, med, large when you finalize / render your project. If iMovie does this, there is no doubt high end Final cut also has a similar option
Old     (asdfgboy)      Join Date: Dec 2011       12-20-2011, 8:44 AM Reply   
Yeah! absolutely that VIMEO is allowing HD.
Old     (kirk)      Join Date: May 2003       12-20-2011, 9:13 AM Reply   
If you are shooting HD with your GoPro, Vimeo is only the way to go. Pay for the upgrade. It's well worth it if you are going to do many projects. You Tube really bites. I had most of my music removed from my videos on Youtube and they have a pretty strict limit on download size.
Old    logan            12-27-2011, 12:06 PM Reply   
There should be a quicktime compression in final cut, but if you want to leave the file as an HD file then compression may not be allowed.
Old     (jman)      Join Date: Jul 2004       02-18-2012, 8:22 PM Reply   
quicktime files are generally pretty large i think uncompressed. try saving it as an mpeg4 file with a constant bit rate at the max. I use sony vegas so its a bit different but that is what I have used to upload to vimeo, and still gives a great picture.
Old     (guma)      Join Date: Sep 2009       02-18-2012, 10:13 PM Reply   
You could run your finished file through Handbrake and make it smaller if you really want to post it up to YouTube. Otherwise, like most have already said, start using Vimeo.
Old     (gnarslayer)      Join Date: Sep 2008       02-19-2012, 7:52 AM Reply   
thats odd cause i upload tons of videos to youtube... most are over one gig... my average video is 1.5 to 2 gigs

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