Adjust the up and down arrow or drag the value bar to reduce the size to less than 20MB. Then you can customize the detailed parameters. Then click the Launch Free Compressor button again to choose the desired GoPro videos.
Click the Launch Free Compressor button to install the plugin in a few seconds. Navigate to the website of AnyMp4 Free Online Compressor on any browser. Provide many output video formats to choose from, including MP4, AVI, WMV, and so on.
Support reducing GoPro videos in 4K, or 1080p HD to any resolution. Able to adjust the specific video size to less than 20MB that is best for email attachment. Compress GoPro video files to smaller ones in three simple clicks free online. Moreover, you can customize the video parameters to get the most proper one to send from email.
Without any watermark and limitation, you can use this tool to compress GoPro videos totally free online. Using AnyMP4 Free Online Video Compressor is the easiest way to shrink GoPro videos because you don’t need to download any software.
Part 1: How to Compress GoPro Video Files Free Online
Personally I would use a very high quality setting instead of actual lossless. The advantage is that you will get a standard H.264 file that will work in any decent video editor - assuming it's fast enough to decode at those insanely high bit rates of course ). On modern CPUs it's extremely fast if you use the 'superfast' or 'ultrafast' preset. You can use H.264 with constant rate factor 0, this will give you a lossless H.264 file. This seems very promising but there doesn't seem to be an option to disable compression (make it just write a lossless video file that I can compress using the video editor of choice). I then will either re-encode and cut with VirtualDub (which works very well on WINE so I can use that on Linux as well), or if I want to add text/captions and/or transitions then I'll open it in a video editing program.īasically, it'd be nice if people who have asinine amounts of free-space like me could have SSR use as much as it wants, then compress later to reduce the performance hit when recording. When I record games on Windows with FRAPS, I open FRAPS, start the game, and start recording, there's not much performance impact since I have it set up to write to my secondary 2TB HDD which is mostly dedicated for recording (it's split 2 ways, 1TB is ext4, while the remaining space is NTFS). If requesting this doesn't exactly make sense, allow me to elaborate. Hi, I'm a FRAPS user and I've been wanting to be able to switch to Linux but I haven't found a viable solution for recording games under my Ubuntu 14.04 install.