I need a video edition program for Ubuntu 13.04 that can make several hours long clips from a picture and mp3 files on resolution 480p with only 1 fps. I tried some programs but they cant bet set on 1 fps :*(
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1see askubuntu.com/questions/21768/… the keyword you are missing is "slideshow"– mswJun 14, 2013 at 13:11
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No program from that discussion have the required options of 480p 1fps video-file– rtaJun 14, 2013 at 13:57
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Why are you specifically wanting it to be set to "1 FPS"? Do you mean 1 photo per second? Are you simply trying to reduce the file size, instead? If file size is a concern, change encoding methods for all but the audio. Please specify your needs a bit more clearly and we can probably point you in the right direction. ;)– gravityJun 14, 2013 at 14:03
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I need to make 5-6 hours long video-clip for Youtube with one picture and 5-6 hours music. I need it to be 480p. Video file with more then one frame per second will be too big - probably hundredths GBs– rtaJun 14, 2013 at 14:22
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Maybe you duplicated your question in this other question? askubuntu.com/questions/308205/… I suggest you to delete one of your questions that refers to the same topic in order to receive the proper support. Thank you.– Geppettvs D'ConstanzoJun 14, 2013 at 15:19
1 Answer
The program imagination
from the 13.04 repository combined with avconv
also from the main Raring repository allowed me to make a 1 FPS video (with music!) just for you.
The destination video file is 693180 octets long for an average of 69KB/second which isn't bad since some of the source images were larger than 100KB and I didn't even bother trying to optimize anything.
The time consuming part of the exercise was signing up to a video hosting service so you could see my 10 second magnum opus.
EDIT Seeing slides at 1 FPS is pretty fatiguing even for 10 seconds; I can't imagine what 6 hours of that would do. In service to my fans, I made the same video but at 0.2FPS. Of course this bumped the video size up, but one does have to suffer for one's art, I hear. Enjoy the "director's cut"
I don't think you understand how video compression works; parts of an image that stay the same don't require (barely any) extra video data. The increase in file size has a lot to do with there being 5 times as much audio data.