Try *.AVI (Windows Video) or *.MOV (Quicktime Movie)
It depends on the quality of the video and the file type. A small file quality in mp4 file format will probably be about 4 hrs. A high quality mp4 file will probably be about 2 hrs on a 1 gigabyte storage device
Video quality depends on Size and Resolution of Screens. Size of Video files depends on the Resolution of the Video format used to Create Frames. File sizes proportionately increase with Higher Resolutions to provide better Video Quality. Also various Video Compression formats decrease the File size like MPEG2 & MPEG4.
I use a software that provided higher ouput quality video.
The size, and length of a video file depends upon the compression and quality of said video file. For high definition video (1080p) a 2 GB video could be as short as 5 minutes, or as long as 2 hours.
If you go up into the little file bar up the top, go to save movie file, save in whatever kind of video you want (I use high-quality video PAL) let it save, then get that file and upload it through YouTube's uploader.
The quality of a charge video is 720p. In other words the resolution for the video is very high quality for a phone, but it is not the best quality available.
It lowers file size and decreases quality.
www.mediaconverter.org/, this site allows you to convert audio to video file as long as you have good quality file to begin with, otherwise you might not get a good video. Good luck.
With a video camera phone, the video quality will be less than the photos, but some have a two- or three-megapixel camera on them, so the photos are high quality. If you get a video camera phone made within the last year or so, you will get some high quality photos and video. Most have at least a 2.0 megapixel camera in them.
That depends a lot on what sort of data you store in those MB, for example low-quality sound, high-quality sound, low-quality video, high-quality video.
Storage limits do not translate into time limits. It depends on the quality of the video, and the quality of audio. I would say somewhere around 12 hours of video tape high quality + high quality audio.
No, generally any conversion of any type makes the quality progressively worse over time. Th ere may not be the biggest change in difference of the video and audio quality at first, but if the same video keeps getting converted, there will be a noticeable change in both video and audio quality.