DVD rips to phone HELP PLEASE

August 5th, 2016

Hu guys, what format do i need a movie too be in so that i can save it too my phone? I’ve tried an mp4 rip and when i try too move it to my phone, it says i haven’t got enough memory, but i have…. i have 1 gig internal and a 2 gig card.
Please can someone help…
any other related help is appreciated,
Thanks in advance,
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Answer #1
What is your phone? If you can’t tell me that I can really only give general help
Answer #2
Try attaching your 2gig storage card directly to PC and moving it that way… and make sure you have enough space
Answer #3
right, i’ve managed to copy it directly onto the memory card, but it says file format not supported or something like that….. it’s mp4, so what format does it need to be in, too play on my phone? It’s a samsung SGH-F300.
Thanks,
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Answer #4
try to convert it into H.263 format
Answer #5
H.263? I’ve never heard of it, any links to a converter? Cheers mate.
Answer #6
Oh you mean convert it too mobile 3GPP. Cheers, i’ll let you know shortly if it works :p
Answer #7
H.263 is a video codec standard originally designed by the ITU-T in a project ending in 1995/1996 as a low-bitrate compressed format for videoconferencing. It is one member of the H.26x family of video coding standards in the domain of the ITU-T Video Coding Experts Group (VCEG).
The codec was first designed to be utilized in H.324 based systems (PSTN and other circuit-switched network videoconferencing and videotelephony), but has since also found use in H.323 (RTP/IP-based videoconferencing), H.320 (ISDN-based videoconferencing), RTSP (streaming media) and SIP (Internet conferencing) solutions.
H.263 was developed as an evolutionary improvement based on experience from H.261, the previous ITU-T standard for video compression, and the MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 standards. Its first version was completed in 1995 and provided a suitable replacement for H.261 at all bitrates. It was further enhanced in projects known as H.263v2 (also known as H.263+ or H.263 1998) and H.263v3 (also known as H.263++ or H.263 2000).
The next enhanced codec developed by ITU-T VCEG (in partnership with MPEG) after H.263 is the H.264 standard, also known as AVC and MPEG-4 part 10. As H.264 provides a significant improvement in capability beyond H.263, the H.263 standard is now considered primarily a legacy design (although this is a recent development). Most new videoconferencing products now include H.264 as well as H.263 and H.261 capabilities.

tell me if it works but I’m not sure. And how are you planing to watch a movie on a tiny screen?
Answer #8
Yeah I would suggest 3GP if it doesn’t support mp4
Answer #9
Thanks everyone 3GP works great!
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