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报告翻译问题
Anyway, 8.3GB for an MP4 file is nuts. That's your editing software I would say. It's not compressing correctly. The largest file I've ever had was about 2-3GB for a 1 hour video which I then cut down to about 8 minutes and it turned out about 1GB. 2-3GB on 50k bitrate 1080p60fps settings. Which I then edit for best 50fps optimization.
Keep in mind editing software does not nearly compress as well as recording in general.
I did play around with Adobe After Effects CC for a while, but that was a trial and I was on unfamiliar ground.
You have the same video card, GTX 1070, as I do. You should try to get Shadowplay working.
Straight up video to compression, easy peasy.
Who does that though. I though Op was just looking for YouTube friendly direct record post stuff. Unedited data is super easy to compress.
Shadowplay...is that the Nvidia thing that pops up when I fire up a game? Near the top right?
https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/1722171?hl=en
(Click the "Bitrate" section for more information)
1080p 60fps video is recommended to be around 12 mbps (12,000 kbps). Even if you try uploading in a higher bitrate (like 50 mbps or so), YouTube will compress it to a lower bitrate.
I use Handbrake on an almost daily basis. It's a great piece of software for compressing video, and it's free. Definitely recommended.
Personally I'd recommend MSI Afterburner instead of OBS if you're not streaming, OBS has been buggy every time I've tried it (Afterburner is also free software).
For my own videos, I try to have as little compression as possible, then compress with Handbrake - so there's only one major file compression happening in the creation of the video. If you compress a video, then compress it again for any reason, you're going to lose visual quality. This does require a lot of hard drive space (I record with Fraps, which records raw video in 150 Mbps). Two hours of 1080p, 60fps video is about 450GB. Then I edit and render in AVI at 150 Mbps (atm I use Magix Movie Edit 15), before using Handbrake to compress to ~12 Mbps (in Mp4 container). A 30 minute, 1080p 60fps video compressed to 12Mbps is ~2.5GB.
I'll go grab handbrake now.
MSI records into an AVI, while OBS records into an MP4.