![]() ![]() How to use the Compressor interface, and how to create an HEVC compression preset. In this tutorial, we learned how to send a Final Cut project to Compressor. Going forward, the preset will be available directly from the destinations list. Select the new ATVC preset, and click OK. Final Cut, will allow you to choose from any of the custom compressor presets. In the destinations window, drag the compressors setting item into the destinations list. You can use your preset inside Final Cut, click the Share button and select customized destinations. If you'll be using your new preset often, you don't want to have to send it to compressor each time. When it finishes, close compressor and the file is there on the desktop. Because H.265 is significantly more compressed than H.264, it may take longer to compress and export. Now click Start Batch to begin processing, which displays the active screen so you can monitor the export progress. To keep things easy, we'll drag desktop to our project location. Or create a custom location by clicking the plus button at the bottom. Let's say we want to say this somewhere else, click the location tab and you can either select one of the built in options. You can keep the default location, the source which is where the library is stored. Now that the new setting is complete, drag it on top of the project name, and then add a location. We'll use 10,000 kilobytes per second which is the same as 10 megabytes per second. Since H.265 is much more efficient, to get equivalents equality, we can cut the number in half. H.264 files and MPEG-4 containers, are typically exported out of Final Cut at 20 megabytes per second or 20,000 kilobytes per second. There are a 1000 kilobytes in a megabyte. I'll set the codec to HEVC, and the data rate to custom, type the data rate as 10,000, why? Because the setting is measured in kilobytes per second, we need the frame rate to be ten megabytes per second. So compressor detects the project settings. ![]() Normally, you won't have to make many edits to these, the frame size and frame rate are set to automatic. Click the video tab, and notice there are a lot of options available. Let's add a few times in this setting on the right side of the screen. Click OK, the new preset is listed in the custom setting area. That data will become important in just a moment. We're producing a file that is 10 megabits per second in an MPEG-4 container. And MP4 for is the container, the files will be placed into, type a description of the setting you're creating. Give the file a name ending in MP4, HEVC and H.265, are the same thing. In the format settings, select MPEG-4, because that's the container we want the H.265 file to be placed in. We're going to make our own preset from scratch, click the plus button in the bottom left corner and select, new setting. Many of the same setting are available in Final Cut, and there are a few extra. On the right, are the details of the project, notice on the left side there are some settings we can choose from. You can send more than one at a time, clicking on the file will load it into the viewer so you can play it in Compressor. Compressor has a very simple interface, in the center you see a list of projects that have been sent from Final Cut. Instead you'll send the project to Compressor, click the file menu and send to Compressor to launch the application. If you click the share button, you won't find any options to create the file. Let's say that you've been asked by a client or a boss to provide an HEVC or H.265 file. In Final Cut, open the project called 706 Compressor. And this tutorial will explore how to send a project in compressor, a basic overview of the Compressor interface and how to make HEVC, otherwise known as H.265 file. When used with Final Cut, you can expand your export options significantly. Compressor is a stand-alone compression application available in the App Store. Sometimes editors are asked to provide their videos in less common formats that you may not have seen in Final Cut Pro10. ![]()
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