Thanks for your wonderful sharing! May I can prepare a special glass to enjoy your 3D Video next time! Wishing you have a great new year and good luck in 2025🎉お疲れ様でした😃
You need to convert the spatial video file (MV-HEVC) to the regular Side-By-Side format first. Then you need to inject metadata to the file so UA-cam can recognize it as a 3D video. Hugh Hou's UA-cam channel can be a good resource. ua-cam.com/video/7DLICMU2oW0/v-deo.html
@ thanks for replying! I did the same thing for the spatial videos on my channel too but I struggle with losing quality when going thru the conversion. I use the Handbrake for injection.
I’m not exactly sure how HandBrake adds metadata, but I assume it re-encodes the file if you notice a loss in quality. Personally, I use the Terminal on my Mac and run the command mentioned in Hugh Hou’s video. This method avoids re-encoding the original file; instead, it duplicates the file, adds the metadata, and packages everything into an .mkv container, so there’s no quality loss. Using the Terminal command can feel a bit intimidating at first, but it’s definitely worth it. Plus, it finishes really quickly-because it’s just duplicating the file, not re-encoding it.
@ thanks for explaining! I looked at Hugh’s video and figured it out. Yes that was way easier and faster compare to using hand break to re-encoding. Wooohooo
Thanks for your wonderful sharing! May I can prepare a special glass to enjoy your 3D Video next time! Wishing you have a great new year and good luck in 2025🎉お疲れ様でした😃
Thanks for sharing, great work!! Glad to watch this in an immersive way. Wonder how did you convert it to be compatible with UA-cam 3D?
You need to convert the spatial video file (MV-HEVC) to the regular Side-By-Side format first. Then you need to inject metadata to the file so UA-cam can recognize it as a 3D video. Hugh Hou's UA-cam channel can be a good resource. ua-cam.com/video/7DLICMU2oW0/v-deo.html
@ thanks for replying! I did the same thing for the spatial videos on my channel too but I struggle with losing quality when going thru the conversion. I use the Handbrake for injection.
I’m not exactly sure how HandBrake adds metadata, but I assume it re-encodes the file if you notice a loss in quality. Personally, I use the Terminal on my Mac and run the command mentioned in Hugh Hou’s video. This method avoids re-encoding the original file; instead, it duplicates the file, adds the metadata, and packages everything into an .mkv container, so there’s no quality loss. Using the Terminal command can feel a bit intimidating at first, but it’s definitely worth it. Plus, it finishes really quickly-because it’s just duplicating the file, not re-encoding it.
@ thanks for explaining! I looked at Hugh’s video and figured it out. Yes that was way easier and faster compare to using hand break to re-encoding. Wooohooo