Macromedia flash 8-using flash video encoder Manuale Utente

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Understanding video standards and terminology
9
Frame rates
Video is a sequence of images that appear on the screen in rapid succession, giving the illusion 
of motion. The number of frames that appear every second is known as the frame rate, and it 
is measured in frames per second (fps). The higher the frame rate, the more frames per second 
are used to display the sequence of images, resulting in smoother motion. The trade-off for 
higher quality, however, is that higher frame rates require a larger amount of data to display 
the video, which uses more bandwidth.
When working with digitally compressed video in a format such as Flash Video, the higher 
the frame rate, the larger the file size. To reduce the file size, you must lower either the frame 
rate or the data rate (for more information, see 
). If you lower the data 
rate and leave the frame rate unchanged, the image quality is reduced. If you lower the frame 
rate and leave the data rate unchanged, the video motion may look less smooth than desired.
Because video looks much better at native frame rates (the frame rate at which the video was 
originally filmed), Macromedia recommends leaving the frame rate high if your delivery 
channels and playback platforms allow it. For full-motion NTSC, (the standard defined by 
the National Television System Committee in the U.S.), use 29.97 fps; for PAL (Phase 
Alternating Line, the dominant television standard in Europe), use 25 fps. If you lower the 
frame rate (which can significantly reduce the video data that must be encoded), Flash Video 
Encoder drops frames at a linear rate to achieve the new fps rate. However, if you need to 
reduce the frame rate, the best results come from dividing evenly. For example, if your source 
has a frame rate of 24 fps, then reduce the frame rate to 12 fps, 8 fps, 6 fps, 4 fps, 3 fps, or 2 
fps. If the source frame rate is 30 fps, in most cases you can adjust the frame rate to 15 fps, 10 
fps, 6 fps, and so on.
If your video clip is encoded with a higher data rate, a lower frame rate can improve playback 
on lower-end computers. For example, if you are compressing a talking-head clip with little 
motion, cutting the frame rate in half might save only 20 percent of the data rate. However, if 
you are compressing high-motion video, reducing the frame rate has a much greater effect on 
the data rate.
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If a video clip is longer than 10 minutes, the audio will drift noticeably out of sync if you do 
not adhere to the 29.97 fps rate or an accurate even division for lower frame rates (such 
as 14.98 fps, which is half of 29.97).
000_FLVEncoder.book  Page 9  Friday, August 12, 2005  3:50 PM