As they say, a bear stepped on my years when i was a baby, so sound quality isn’t something i can distinguish easily. What is digitalized?
What is the difference in compiling a video, if youtube will recompile your recompiled video anyways? If it is only to cut down on traffic, i can live with uploading 1.5gb videos
Btw Shadowplay does Encoding into h.264, so w/e video i get as “raw”, it is already encoded by Shadowplay.
P.S. Does dolby surround gets processed on Output device hardware level or in OS, could that affect a video track somehow?
Ok, throughout some parts of the video, if you pay close attention, you can hear the audio start fizzing, like… huh… speaking through a fan, you hear the sound go in and out of existence.
Youtube doesn’t compile raw video files teh same way a video editor does. What the video editor does is it grabs all the info available to it and processes it for top-notch video quality. And you can really see the difference, both visually and in your hard drive. Raw video files go upwards of 20Gb (for SC match length @ 1080p, 60fps) and processed video (1080p, 30fps for jewtube) going for close to 2Gb. Everything else from the raw file is just information that was used to compress the video and make it viewable by all.
Now, what youtube does is it grabs that file and converts it to their own video file processing, further compressing it and removing a LOT of quality in said process. If you upload it at 60fps, youtube is simply going to cut every odd/even frame from the video, without even caring for frame sync, something the video editor does.
Shadowplay, while excellent for recording, is crap because you use h264 to encode it. If you can change the codec, download “Lagarith Lossless Codec”, otherwise I’d advise you to use Dxtory or OBS with Lagarith’s codec. That codec is just awesome and is the reason my raw files are so small, yet so large for Sony Vegas to work with.
Just have your recorder record the digital audio output (assuming it’s an optical line, that is), it works just the same. It will, however, just slap all audio tracks onto one, which is fairly annoying. Haven’t found any way of nullifying that, though.
Where the recording software grabs the audio/video depends on the software itself. Some nick it from the RAM, others grab the video/audio exits from the hardware, others copy the processed info from the CPU itself…
Video recording is a complex thing, made easy by things like Shadowplay, Fraps or Bandicam… Dxtory is easy to use and you can do things your way if you spend a couple hours looking at it.
Truth be told, since I got my SSD, I’m still trying to get Dxtory to record my microphone without it throwing feedback insanely, so I’m probably not the best example to advise you on this… Seph or maybe Evis might be of better use…