Hot New Video Recipes from DV Kitchen
February 28, 2010 by JoelC2009
Deciding on the best combination of codec, frame size and bitrate is the tricky but essential task faced by anyone encoding video for the web.
In this article, I describe how to use SampleLab, one of 5 unique tools built into video compression suite DV Kitchen to take the guess work out of the encoding equation.
SampleLab is the only tool in the world that is designed to help you determine the best encoding setting for your videos.
Let’s say I have a video of a two people in a park that I want to put on my website. The first question I face is what encoding settings, or recipe, is going to make this clip looks spectacular on the web, but not take up unecessary bandwidth?
That’s the question that SampleLab was designed to answer. A master chef always tastes a variety of samples before finalizing a recipe. A master video compressionist does the same thing.
Fast Start with QuickSpecs
In SampleLab, you have the option to choose an existing recipe or create your own. Either way, the fastest way to get started is with QuickSpecs, the built-in default options. Choose from the amazing x264 codec, Flash FLV, or Windows media formats, choose any frame size and a bitrate, click go and you’re done.
Next, create a second sample with different characteristics and compare it against the first. SampleLab allows you to toggle between your samples while they’re playing in the built in video player.
Repeat the exercise with as many different settings as you like until you are satisfied that you have the achieved the ‘threshold of quality’ (TOQ) . . . the setting that represents the best trade-off between quality and bitrate size.
“TOQ” is the phrase coined by DV Kitchen designer Josh Mellicker to describe the diminishing returns of increasing bitrate over a certain amount for a particular movie. The TOQ of a clip is the “sweet spot” – just enough bitrate so the movie looks fabulous, but no more.
SampleLab is by far the best way to find the TOQ for each clip you encode. When you decide on a winner, save your recipe so you can recall it in the future with a single click.
To learn more about SampleLab, watch the official avi to mp4 mac demo video.

Make sure you go to a culinary school to learn the basics about running a restaurant and cooking and from there take advanced classes as well, normally you wouldn't open your own restaurant without atleast a little bit of experience working in a restaurant
DiBella is looking for a marketing coordinator/graphic designer – looks great! #bnejobs
I don't think there are any. You could try Windows Media Player.
Good post. We are transforming our dated library into a resource room, and in doing so are trying to find a good system as well. I've asked around the net today, and responses are till coming in.
I can't afford to pay much for a solution right now. But I'd love to have an online system, with ISBN import, multiple media formats supported, simple circulation support, and online database access.
We are eliminating 70% of our books that aren't in line with the vision we have for this ministry, but plan to add a lot in the future. We also need support for multiple copies, for small group materials.
Im still hoping to come across a simple web2.0 solution, but the more I look the more doubtful I become.
The mp3 player I currently have is a 2GB Sandisk Sansa Clip. After a year I still love it, haven't had any problems with it, and the sound is really great. I just need a bit of a bigger memory, so I'm staying with the Sandisk line and looking at an 8GB Sansa Fuze (also a video player) which at the equivalent of roughly 50GBP at our ASDA/Walmart can't be beat.
You have to get the plugin for firefox to make work!!
All the plugins in this link
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/browse/type:7