[optimal] Re: Sending movie files

  • From: "Michael R. Turano Jr." <turano@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "optimal@xxxxxxxxxxxxx" <optimal@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 1 Sep 2011 17:29:42 -0400

h.264 gets my vote for compression

Dropbox is great. It makes sharing flies easy, it's free for 2GB and once you 
start using it you will find many more uses. 

Mike

Michael R. Turano, Jr., CRA, OCT-C

Imaging Specialist

C 917.826.9506
F 917.591.1841

turano@xxxxxxxxx

Sent from my iPhone

On Sep 1, 2011, at 4:55 PM, sandor ferenczy <sandorferenczy@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Peter
> I have been exporting the movies as "raw" then encoding with QuickTime to 
> h.264 (mp4) 
> 
> typically looks almost identical but about 1/10 the file size - 900 MB files 
> drop down to about 9-10 MB.
> 
> h.264 is pretty much the best quality v. size codec that is available. i 
> wasn't satisfied with any of the built in codecs on the spectralis (lots of 
> artifacts, especially in the capillaries) so I came up with my current 
> method. On a Mac, it was simple to setup a drag-n-drop applet, on a PC with 
> QuickTime, it may be another 2 steps.
> 
> -sandor
> 
> On Sep 1, 2011, at 3:57 PM, "Breit, Peter" <BreitP@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> 
>> Dear colleagues,
>>             I like to e-mail Spectralis OCT avi files. Size is ~ 230 
>> megabytes, ZIP compressed ~ 54 Mb.
>> What kind of program should I use ? PANDO ?
>>  
>> Unfortunately our brand new Spectralis is not yet connected to the internet. 
>>  I have to save the files and e-mail from my computer.
>>  
>>  
>> Thank you
>> Peter
>>  
>> Peter L. Breit, CRA.
>> Director Ophthalmic Services
>> The Lankenau Hospital & Bryn Mawr Hospital
>> 484-476-3338
>> 484-476-8206 fax
>> 484-437-3262 mobile
>> page 3707
>>  
>>  
>>  
>>  
>>  
>>  

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