Note bene: I realize this is an immensely complicated question with about a million levels of nuance that I'm trying to reduce to a single number...
I'm about to undertake a large video encoding project using H.264 encoding. We are trying to create multiple bitrate profiles in order to accommodate streaming across internet connections, processors, devices, etc.
Generally speaking, what kind of compression ratio should I be expecting to see (while staying within a reasonable level of quality)?
For example, a 640x360 (16:9) pixel video file @ 24 frames per second and 16-bit color should yield an uncompressed file that is approximately 33 MB/s.
I've been told that, for that file, 500 Kbits/second (or 62 KB/s) is not an unreasonable video bitrate. That seems insane - more than 530:1 compression? That's 99.8% compression. Is my math wrong?
I'm just looking for a rough outer guide for quality, like "more than 500x compression is crazy" or "less than 400x is a waste of bandwidth". I've looked everywhere, and nothing gives me any kind of expected compression...
question from:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5024114/suggested-compression-ratio-with-h-264