Sorenson Squeeze 4 Compression Suite

If you compress video, you’ve probably accumulated a small battery of compression tools—each tailored to a specific task or file format. You may have different programs for DVD- and Web-based video, as well as multiple codecs for specific formats, such as Windows Media, QuickTime or MPEG-2. Why so many programs and codecs? You want the best tool for the job, and no one—it seems—has managed to gather the best tools into a single application.



That may change with the introduction of Sorenson Squeeze 4 Compression Suite. This deceptively simple application handles most professional video formats, including Windows Media 9, RealMedia, QuickTime, MPEG-4, MPEG-2, MPEG-1 and AVC/H.264. Because the Squeeze 4 interface is uncluttered and consistent throughout the various formats, production houses can now hand over many of their compression tasks to employees who don’t have a lot of technical expertise.

Best of all, Squeeze 4 is fast and produces excellent results. With Web-based projects, you can use it to retain as much resolution and clarity as possible, while reducing your video to a manageable size. Squeeze 4 does an especially good job with Flash files, where you can save your video to either a Flash video file (.flv) or Flash movie file (.swf). You can customize many of the compression settings, though the options vary according to the format. For example, you can add a visual watermark when compressing to a QuickTime file, which isn’t an option with any of the other formats.

Other useful features include HD resolution encoding, batch processing, two-pass encoding for higher-quality video, custom filters, and direct capture from computer-connected DV sources.

There are limitations to this approach. Squeeze 4 is essentially a closed system. You can’t share the Squeeze 4 Compression Suite codecs with your other programs, and you can’t use your other codecs with Squeeze 4. And while Squeeze 4 is relatively comprehensive in its selection of settings and codecs, I did find a few omissions. The Windows Media 9 codec doesn’t support 5.1 audio, even though that option is included with Microsoft’s own encoder. And there’s no provision for compressing to DivX, even though that format is beginning to turn up in portable video devices, such as the Archos AV420. Fortunately, you can always revert to your previous compression tools.

We’re not yet at the point where a single application can serve every video compression need. On the other hand, Squeeze 4’s speed, quality and convenience are so strong, you’ll want to use it whenever and wherever you can.




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