04-12-2020 01:46 PM - last edited 04-12-2020 01:46 PM
04-12-2020 05:59 PM - last edited 04-12-2020 06:04 PM
04-12-2020 07:59 PM
04-12-2020 08:28 PM
07-12-2020 11:28 AM - last edited 07-12-2020 11:29 AM
This is actually a normal operation of the device and it is beneficial to users. However, I'll forward your suggestion to our development team so that the user can choose if they want to make the video file larger or smaller after cutting it 😉.
08-12-2020 01:13 PM - last edited 08-12-2020 01:14 PM
02-04-2022 01:23 AM - last edited 02-04-2022 01:38 AM
I had the same problem as this guy.
While you were smug like most people in these places, you offered advice to fix it. Except you didnt actually.
1280x720. 55 second clips trimmed down to 35. EXACT same resolution. No upscaling. Still turned a 14mb filed in 33mb.
Samsung video editor clearly makes changes to the file that increase its size with encoding.
Youre wrong and arrogant. Terrible combo.
02-04-2022 01:26 AM
Dudes full of *****. 2 years later and its still doing the same thing even though i make sure its the same resolution
02-04-2022 01:27 AM - last edited 02-04-2022 01:39 AM
Youre a passive aggressive, perpetually online dweeb, who is arrogantly wrong.
27-10-2022 03:25 AM
Exactly my thought and why I'm here too. It's not upscaling the resolution or the bit rate based on the properties of the original and the post processing copy from samsung gallery video editor. 346.71mb to 544.19mb. Both are MP4, 30fps, 852x480, H264, AAC,
In editor, I cut the first 11 seconds just to have a visible thumbnail in gallery because the video starts blank and the thumbnail is based on the first second if the video.
The only setting you can change in my scenario regarding "size and format" is to select HEVC which claims to reduce storage footprint. I've done this also and it still increases from original size by atleast 20%. Also it takes forever to process. I cut like 10 seconds and it'll take 15 minutes to process and save the copy.