Перевод card size limit for video recording

Изменить размер видео

Измените размер видео для Instagram, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter и других социальных сетей

Пресеты для социальных сетей

Есть готовые предустановки для всех возможных типов публикаций и объявлений в Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, Snapchat, Twitter, Pinterest и LinkedIn.

Пользовательское изменение размера видео

Если вы хотите, чтобы ваше видео имело точную ширину и высоту, вы можете ввести значения независимо от соотношения сторон. Другой способ — выбрать соотношение сторон, ввести ширину видео, и инструмент автоматически установит высоту видео.

Настройка кадрирования

Вы можете поместить все видео в выбранный кадр и изменить цвет фона или полностью заполнить кадр, чтобы не оставлять пустое пространство.

Сделайте вертикальное видео горизонтальным и наоборот

С помощью Clideo вы можете сконвертировать вертикальное видео в горизонтальное и размыть фон. Для этого выберите желаемый пресет, нажмите на иконку «ведёрца с краской» и выберите параметр «Размытие».

Конвертация видео

Выбрав предустановку для социальных сетей, вы сможете конвертировать видео в один из форматов, поддерживаемых выбранными социальными сетями. Если вы введете пользовательские значения, у вас будет более 20 форматов на выбор.

Полная конфиденциальность

Мы заботимся о вашей конфиденциальности, поэтому ваши файлы защищены сертификатом SSL на нашем сайте. Никто не имеет к ним доступа, кроме вас все время.

Измените размер видео

Выберите предустановку для социальных сетей или задайте пользовательские размеры

Как изменить размер видео онлайн

Загрузите видео

Выберите файл для изменения размера с вашего компьютера Mac или Windows, телефона iPhone или Android, Google Drive или учетной записи Dropbox. Вы также можете добавить ссылку на видео YouTube или другой онлайн-ресурс. Инструмент позволяет редактировать файлы до 500 МБ бесплатно.

Изменить размер вашего видеофайла

Когда откроется редактор, выберите необходимый пресет или введите пользовательские размеры. Затем выберите опцию кадрирования и отрегулируйте видео с помощью селекторов масштаба и положения. При необходимости измените цвет фона и укажите формат для выходного файла. Нажмите кнопку «Изменить размер».

Скачайте изменённое видео

Ваше видео готово к сохранению. Теперь просмотрите превью, убедитесь, что видео не потеряло качество, и нажмите кнопку «Скачать». При желании, вы можете сохранить его обратно в Dropbox или Google Drive.

Мы подготовили предустановки не только для популярных, но и буквально для всех типов постов и рекламы в социальных сетях. Среди них Instagram Story, IGTV, YouTube 240p — 2160p, объявления в Discovery и TrueView, обложка Facebook, реклама In-Stream и многое другое.

Если вы изменили размер своего видео так, что остались полосы, сделайте их привлекательными, под стать самому видео! Для этого вы можете выбрать один из предложенных цветов или параметр «Размытие» или ввести свой собственный цвет, используя шестнадцатеричный код.

Установите приложение для изменения размера видео на iPhone

Скачайте приложение на ваш iPhone, чтобы измененять размер видео офлайн для Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, Snapchat, Twitter, Pinterest и LinkedIn.

Откройте приложение «Камера» или другое приложение для сканирования QR-кода..

Поднесите камеру к QR-коду, чтобы его отсканировать. Держите телефон ровно..

Вы будете перенаправлены в App Store, где вы сможете скачать приложение для изменения размера видео..

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Thread: Video recording size limit

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Video recording size limit

I have a SGSII-I777 AT&T Rooted with ICS 4 installed. Before I did this update, I was able to record video in HD for long periods of time uninterrupted, but now I have noticed the camera app in ICS stops video at 17 mins of 720HD recording or an aprox file size of 1.7 GB.

My question is about being able to change the file size limits for video recording as I do not see this possibility anywhere in the camera options. I would like to know if there is any way of changing these limits in order to be able to record HD video for longer periods of time. Or if you know what is preventing me from recording longer time frames please let me know.

I already verified I had enough space in the internal storage and SD card and the results are the same for both.

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Re: Video recording size limit

Have you tried a different app from the market and compared the recording times?

Sent from my GT-I9300

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I haven’t found any good video recording apps on the android market that solve the problem of the max file size: 1.9GB

17 minutes HD video

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Re: Video recording size limit

I have only ever used LGCamera. I rarely record vids though.

Sent from my GT-I9300

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I have a SGSII-I777 AT&T Rooted with ICS 4 installed. Before I did this update, I was able to record video in HD for long periods of time uninterrupted, but now I have noticed the camera app in ICS stops video at 17 mins of 720HD recording or an aprox file size of 1.7 GB.

My question is about being able to change the file size limits for video recording as I do not see this possibility anywhere in the camera options. I would like to know if there is any way of changing these limits in order to be able to record HD video for longer periods of time. Or if you know what is preventing me from recording longer time frames please let me know.

I already verified I had enough space in the internal storage and SD card and the results are the same for both.

Did you or anyone else find a way to record longer length videos?

Источник

[Update: Confirmed] Android 11 may finally remove Android’s 4GB file size limit for video recordings

Update (6/12/20 @ 4:00 PM ET): It’s official: Android 11 finally gets rid of the 4GB file size limit for video recordings.

In 2019, smartphone brands have made huge jumps in camera quality, especially when it comes to zoom and low-light. On the other hand, video quality hasn’t been given the same amount of attention. That could change in 2020 with the Qualcomm Snapdragon 865’s improved ISP. Yet, even as Android smartphones are shipping with larger internal storage capacities, have faster modems, and are now supporting 5G networks, an old limitation prevents most of these phones from saving video files that are larger than 4GB in size. However, that could change in Android 11, the next major version of Android that’s set to release in 2020.

I’ll try to summarize the reasoning behind this limitation without going too deep into the technical aspects. Basically, Google decided that Android’s MediaMuxer and MPEG4Writer classes, which are respectively responsible for muxing (combining) video files and saving them as MP4 files, should support outputting an MP4 file with a maximum size of 2^32 – 1 bytes, which is approximately 4GB. This decision was made in early 2014, back when the Google Nexus 5 with its maximum 32GB of internal storage was still on the market, SD cards were still widely in use, and the first phones with 4K video recording had just come to market (Galaxy Note 3). Thus, there wasn’t much demand to save video files over 4GB in size: most phones didn’t have enough storage, SD cards formatted in FAT32 wouldn’t support it anyway, and few phones recorded in high enough quality to even meet that limitation. Fast forward 5 years and much has changed: there are now phones with 1TB of storage, SD cards are now the exception rather than the norm, and 4K video recording is ubiquitous, with 8K video recording soon to reach devices.

Today, if you record a 4K video on the Pixel 4, your video will reach 4GB in size in about 12 minutes; that’s at the default quality settings of 30fps for the frame rate and 48Mbps for the bitrate. After about 12 minutes of recording, the camera app will save the video and immediately begin recording another video – without the user noticing. When you check your phone’s DCIM folder, you’ll notice that what was supposed to be one continuous video recording has instead been split into multiple video files. For example, a 73 minute video recording on my Pixel 4 was split into 7 different files – all of which were seen by Google Photos as separate recordings. It’s not difficult to mux these MP4 files before uploading to Google Photos, but you’ll have to use a third-party app if you want to do so. Most people wouldn’t bother or know how to do so, I would imagine.

A 73 minute 4K30 video recording from my Pixel 4 split up into 7 different files.

Developers have asked for a way to record video files larger than 4GB in size for years now, and it seems that change could finally be coming in Android 11. According to the description of a new commit in the AOSP gerrit, Google is updating Android’s media classes to remove the 32-bit file size limitation. Specifically, Android will now “use [a] 64bit offset in mpeg4writer,” which allows Android “to compose/mux files more than 4GB in size.” During testing, Google successfully composed a file of around 32GB in size, and in a separate test, even managed to fill up the entire storage capacity of the phone with a single recording. A maximum file size of 2^64 -1 bytes is comically large and would never really ever be met, so we expect Google to limit the MediaRecorder API or OEMs to limit their stock camera apps to support a more reasonable maximum file size. However, apps like OpenCamera that use the Camera2API should still be able to arbitrarily set whatever maximum file size they want without having to worry about the 32-bit file size limitation.

OpenCamera’s Video Recording Settings

The commit has not been merged yet, but when it does, we expect the change to be reflected in Android 11 since that’s the next major Android release. The first Android 10 beta went live in March of this year, so expect to see an Android 11 beta in March of 2020 followed by a stable release sometime in August of 2020. With phones from Xiaomi and Samsung expected to support 8K video recording, this change is welcome – albeit way overdue.

Thanks to XDA Recognized Developer luca020400 for the tip!

Update: Confirmed

Videographers rejoice, Android 11 officially gets rid of the 4GB file size limit for video recordings. Android 11 Beta 1 finally removes the limitation, but you’ll need to use a camera app that supports it. Right now, not even Google’s own camera app supports it yet. The popular app Open Camera does seem to support it already and we should see more apps, including Google Camera, add support too.

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