A month ago (7th of February), I posted a thread pretty much the same as this one, but this time I have learnt a bit more. I don't know how many of you will read this or understand, but hopefully my attempt was worth something.
I have a Sanyo 5600 (Sanyo MM-5600) phone, with a 1GB mini-SD card in it. It can play music and video using it, and even store files to use like a flash storage device (which I like doing). But when it comes down to the video, things get complicated. My phone can play AAC / MP3 / 13kQCELP (must be the ring-tone?) audio, and MPEG4 / 3GPP2 / 3GPP video.
My first method of getting video onto it was this:
http://www.sprintusers.com/forum/showthread.php?t=61517
All I had to do is get something to convert my WMV files into MPEG or AVI, then use the next program to convert to 3G2, and it turned out alright. But the picture had limited quality in both audio (mono or stereo, which doesn't matter), and video. From what I have been able to gather, a picture that I take fits the dimensions of:
Thanks to Quicktime (iTunes would not start up for some reason), I found that the one decent video on my phone was this:
Format: Apple MPEG4 Decompresser, 176 x 144, Millions
AAC, Stereo (L R), 8.000 kHz
Movie FPS: 25.00
Data Size: 5.33 MB
Data Rate: 22.58 KB
Normal Size: 176 x 144 pixels
Current Size: 176 x 144
Just recently I used a program called Multimediafeed 3GP Mobile Video Converter which for one 5.75 MB video file actually worked great (WMV -> MP4). Thing is, when I then moved onto the files I wanted to convert (100+ files, up to 20 seconds each, 1288 KB), all I got was 1-5 KB files that I couldn't even open. Could you help me make sense of this? Why is this latest program not working so well with smaller files?
Edit: If you want to look back:
http://forums.techguy.org/multimedia...mv-mobile.html