Owning a GoPro camera is a total blast, but having to deal with the ultra-high-def footage and non-standard frame rates it generates forces you to think of details you might not have had to think about before. And beyond that, of course you want to show off all that pixel clarity. Watching one of your clips on the desktop is a jaw-dropping experience; watching it again after it’s been uploaded to the web is comparatively disappointing. But hosting the original files on your own server isn’t a very nice option either.
After spending the day with a GoPro on my head at the Santa Cruz Boardwalk yesterday, tried uploading one of the clips to both YouTube and Vimeo, and you can check them both out below for sake of comparison (try both of them full-screen).
Here’s the Vimeo version:
Double Shot, Santa Cruz Boardwalk w/GoPro Helmet Cam from Scot Hacker on Vimeo.
Since Vimeo is known for having the highest quality, it’s no surprise that the Vimeo version has less pixelation and more retained detail. But I’ve got seven clips to upload, and have to “wait for my week to reset” before I can upload more high-def footage, unless I spring for the “Plus” version at $10/month. Otherwise I have to wait for Wednesday to roll around if I want it free.
And here’s the YouTube version:
I don’t mind paying for services that provide quality, but $10/month is kind of steep for me, given how seldom I’ll need this ability. Hrmm, what to do.
cron the upload using their APIs ?
Oh, you mean to delay the Vimeo uploads over a period of days to not run over quota? Yeah, that’s a possibility.
Youtube 4 ever .. I don’t think viemo can defeat youtube :)
Selina – It’s not about anyone “defeating” anyone. The question is purely about who has the better video quality, and that answer is “clearly Vimeo” (unless that changes at some point in the future).
Hi can you help regarding the setting you use in your go pro fot that hd video? Always having problem when i upload the video to fb its pixelized.,tnx