Quality uploading to YouTube

I am planning on buying the canon 600D so can I record the high frame rate thing on there?

The 600d can record at 30p at 1080p resolution, which means you're not really able to record at a significantly higher frame rate than what you'll want to upload in. There are some lower-priced cameras that can handle 60p quite well ( http://gopro.com/cameras/hd-hero3-black-edition ) for example, but you're not going to get the flexibility that you'd have with a DSLR, and even then, you'd only be able to slow the video down to half-speed.

For quality overcranking, you're going to need something quite heftier, like a RED.

And what do you mean by 'in post'


In post-production.
 
Yeah but why does this happen? Without the editor there will be no music, no effects, etc.
To tell you the truth, I'm not sure man. Wish I could help : |

I personally think that it is the GoPro Camera, I've been reading the reviews and many people are saying that the camera doesn't work the best with editors. That could be the issue you're having.
 
To tell you the truth, I'm not sure man. Wish I could help : |

I personally think that it is the GoPro Camera, I've been reading the reviews and many people are saying that the camera doesn't work the best with editors. That could be the issue you're having.
I've seen some awesome gopro video on Youtube though, like super crystal clear. I just don't know how they do it.
 
Yeah but why does this happen? Without the editor there will be no music, no effects, etc.

Should be your export settings. (Or maybe the import settings, but export would be the first guess.) YouTube always converts your files upon upload and there are certain file types, codecs, bitrates, etc that the YouTube converter handles better than others. If you see a difference once your video is up on YouTube your export settings aren't optimal.
 
Should be your export settings. (Or maybe the import settings, but export would be the first guess.) YouTube always converts your files upon upload and there are certain file types, codecs, bitrates, etc that the YouTube converter handles better than others. If you see a difference once your video is up on YouTube your export settings aren't optimal.
Yeah I've been experimenting with it. I have 3 GoPro mountain biking videos up, 1 is with no editing (1st one), then with Premiere (2nd one) and the latest is Powerdirector 11. I still have to mess with all the export settings of PD because I deleted my Adobe programs (their customer service p****d me off).
 
Am worried of spending good money on a great camera and setup but when it uploads to YouTube the quality won't be the same. Can this happen? As youtubes settings are different to the camera itself.

Also another question.. If I want to create a slow motion effect is this complicated to do? Do I have to film on a certain setting then on a video editor add some other setting?

I'm just worried YouTube won't look as good? But then I've seen people's test footage on there and it looks amazing so maybe not ?

And is there a limit to the length of a high quality video you can upload to YouTube of?

Thanks
Just make sure to invest your money into a good camera and when you review your video to ensure it is the way you like like it upload the file to youtube and for the slow motion effect youtube just added this feature in the editors tools i haven't used it yet.:)
 
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