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On today’s Tech Help for Churches, Sample rate, bit rate, codecs, and iTunesWhen you’re encoding an edited file, there are some terms you need to know and understand:
Sample rate: how often a sample is taking. More is better than less, but there comes a point when more will only create a bigger file, but the quality improvement won’t be worth it. For a mono audio podcast, I recommend 22.050 khz
Bit rate: how large each sample is. A very small sample taken very often won’t give you a good quality reproduction. Neither will a large sample taken too infrequently. A good sample size is 96 kbps. More and you’re not going to get much advantage. Less and you’ll have poor quality.
VBR vs. CBR: My thinking has changed on this. VBR (variable bit rate) could save some file size, but this is at the expense of compatibility. Some players won’t play the audio properly, so I’d recommend CBR (constant bit rate).
For video, you can think of similar properties that are called different things.
Frame rate: How often an image is drawn to simulate motion. Lower than 15 and it gets really stuttery. More than 60 is almost always unnecessary outside of gaming. Television in the US is typically 30 (but sometimes 60). I’d keep close to 30.
Resolution: Like bit rate, this is the amount of information contained in each frame. SD (standard def) is 480 lines. HD is 720-1080. 4k is 2160ish (depending on the standard of 4k used). More is better, but if a podcast is watched on a small phone, you’ll get no advantage to having it distributed in 4k. If it’s watched on televisions, 1080 or 720 are good starting points.
Codec: A codec is the set of instructions used by the computer to COmpress and DECompress the signal. Some codecs are better for editing and others for distribution. Video files should use H.264 to be compatible with the most devices and be smaller than those in editing codecs.
iTunes
Love it or hate it, iTunes is where the most popular podcast directory is. Make sure you submit there unless you don’t want a large audience.
You can also use iTunes to trim podcasts, encode them, and edit ID3 tags. It’s not the best tool for those things, but it can do them.
This show is recorded live every Monday at 11a edt, 8a pdt, 3p utc on http://churchtechcast.com. Watch it live and join the chat then.
About this show:
Tech Help for Churches is a weekly podcast recorded live every Monday at 11a edt, 8a pdt, 3p utc on http://churchtechcast.com. Watch it live and join the chat then.
But, if you miss the live show, I’ll put up the edited show later (usually on the same day) right here.
If you use the internet, social media, or new media to advance your church’s mission, this show is for you.
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