You need to re-encode your video with the changed bitrate.
You need to download a Bitrate converter.
FASM "Quality Enhancer Bitrate Squeezer" is an application for compressing h264 video streams, optimised for low bitrate.
Right click and properties
Bitrate
It can be up to about 9.80 Mbps, however, the bitrate is pretty much always variable, so this can be near impossible to figure out. The most helpful approximation: The maximumbitrate. Your DVD player program can tell you this.
Noteburner MP3 Bitrate Converter is a commercial program that can change the bitrate while maintaining the ID3 tags which contain the artist and other information.
MP4 and 3GP and the max recomaded bitrate is 500kbps and 20 fps for best results !
Answer 1. insert the DVD you want 2. download handbrake 3. open it up 4. choose the disk 5.click open 6.Select Apple-Universal preset : This sets most of the settings required for the PSP. Scale the video to 480 x 272 (max dimensions) : On the "Picture" tab, change "Anamorphic" to NONE (or else your video will not display in the proper proportions on the psp). Change the Width to be 480, height to be 272, or any numbers that are both lower than 480 x 272. 7.Set max video bitrate to 768 kbps : Click on the "Video" tab. Change the option to "Avg. Bitrate (kbps)". Change the value to be 768 or any number lower than 768. The PSP 1001 manual states "The PSP system cannot play video data converted at bit rates higher than 768 kbps." You may need to set your number lower than 768; it seems that this is an "average" bitrate. If your encoded video stops playing midway through the video, chances are it averaged over the max value of 768. 8.At this point, you can start your Encode
Depends on the compression rate of the video, depends on the bitrate of the moive, depends on the file the video is being saved as i.e. mp3, mp4, aac, etc
15 frames per second. I suggest the video size is 320x240 and the video bitrate can be from 500-650 kbps. Use MP4 or H.264
Unlikely, but maybe, depending on the bitrate and how (or if) the video is compressed. Normally, uncompressed DVD-quality MPEG-4 video would require about 11GB per hour. If you are talking video that has been formatted for a small-screen mobile device like the iPod Touch, a bitrate of 256Kbps would give you just under a gig of storage per hour of video, in which case your 16Gb device would have plenty of room.
No Serato Scratch does not change the bit rate. Serato is simply an engine for playing your existing MP3's