I've been playing around trying to figure out a way to upload a stereo video to YouTube in HD. So far it seems that you can either fill the HD frame by squashing the vids up side by side thus effectively loosing half your res when YT plays them, or maintaining the aspect ratio and having large areas of nothing at the top and bottom.
I've been playing around trying to figure out a way to upload a stereo video to YouTube in HD. So far it seems that you can either fill the HD frame by squashing the vids up side by side thus effectively loosing half your res when YT plays them, or maintaining the aspect ratio and having large areas of nothing at the top and bottom.
Well, the old way to do it is to upload at full resolution and use tags:
yt3d:aspect=16:9 yt3d:enable=true
You can try doing that to see if it will still work. I don't know how much longer that will be supported, though, or what will happen to videos when (if?) they stop supporting it.
Well, the old way to do it is to upload at full resolution and use tags:
yt3d:aspect=16:9 yt3d:enable=true
You can try doing that to see if it will still work. I don't know how much longer that will be supported, though, or what will happen to videos when (if?) they stop supporting it.
[quote name='wac' date='04 July 2011 - 04:11 AM' timestamp='1309777895' post='1259882']
I've been playing around trying to figure out a way to upload a stereo video to YouTube in HD. So far it seems that you can either fill the HD frame by squashing the vids up side by side thus effectively loosing half your res when YT plays them, or maintaining the aspect ratio and having large areas of nothing at the top and bottom.
thoughts?
[/quote]
YouTube only support hosting of 3D videoclips in squeezed side-by-side mode at the moment. The NVIDIA plug-in does the work of splitting and scaling back the L/R images into fullscreen sequential mode for viewing with 3DVision.
[quote name='wac' date='04 July 2011 - 04:11 AM' timestamp='1309777895' post='1259882']
I've been playing around trying to figure out a way to upload a stereo video to YouTube in HD. So far it seems that you can either fill the HD frame by squashing the vids up side by side thus effectively loosing half your res when YT plays them, or maintaining the aspect ratio and having large areas of nothing at the top and bottom.
thoughts?
YouTube only support hosting of 3D videoclips in squeezed side-by-side mode at the moment. The NVIDIA plug-in does the work of splitting and scaling back the L/R images into fullscreen sequential mode for viewing with 3DVision.
thoughts?
thoughts?
yt3d:aspect=16:9 yt3d:enable=true
You can try doing that to see if it will still work. I don't know how much longer that will be supported, though, or what will happen to videos when (if?) they stop supporting it.
I can't say that I like squashing videos, either.
yt3d:aspect=16:9 yt3d:enable=true
You can try doing that to see if it will still work. I don't know how much longer that will be supported, though, or what will happen to videos when (if?) they stop supporting it.
I can't say that I like squashing videos, either.
I've been playing around trying to figure out a way to upload a stereo video to YouTube in HD. So far it seems that you can either fill the HD frame by squashing the vids up side by side thus effectively loosing half your res when YT plays them, or maintaining the aspect ratio and having large areas of nothing at the top and bottom.
thoughts?
[/quote]
YouTube only support hosting of 3D videoclips in squeezed side-by-side mode at the moment. The NVIDIA plug-in does the work of splitting and scaling back the L/R images into fullscreen sequential mode for viewing with 3DVision.
Patrick
I've been playing around trying to figure out a way to upload a stereo video to YouTube in HD. So far it seems that you can either fill the HD frame by squashing the vids up side by side thus effectively loosing half your res when YT plays them, or maintaining the aspect ratio and having large areas of nothing at the top and bottom.
thoughts?
YouTube only support hosting of 3D videoclips in squeezed side-by-side mode at the moment. The NVIDIA plug-in does the work of splitting and scaling back the L/R images into fullscreen sequential mode for viewing with 3DVision.
Patrick