If you were always wondering how you could load your own videos into this beautiful digital camera, you came to the right place!
This camera accepts AVI-files with the following specifications:
- Video-Codec: MJPEG
- Audio-Codec: IMA ADPCM
Unfortunately, not every application can produce compatible files, even if the codecs used are correct.
One that does is the SUPER Media File Converter from eRightSoft.
For this tutorial, I use a Flash video file (.flv) downloaded from YouTube as source, but it should work with every other popular video file format as well, such as MP4, MKV or good old AVI of course.
Here we go:
- Drag and drop your file into the box in the lower part of the converter.
- In the upper part of the application, choose "AVI" as your output container, "M-JPEG" as your output video codec, and "ADPCM IMA" as your output audio codec.
- Choose "FFmpeg" right underneath, as encoder engine.
- In the "VIDEO" part, if your video is standard 4:3, choose 320:240 as your video scale size, and 4:3 as aspect; else if it is 16:9 widescreen, choose 320:176 and 16:9, then click on "Crop / Pad" to the right, check the "Pad ON" option, make sure you have 32 in the upper and lower boxes, then click on the color picker and choose black. This will make sure your vertical resolution attains 240 again, with black bars at the top and bottom of the video. This is important, since the camera doesn't handle widescreen files. Either case, resolutions beyond 320x make no sense here, since the camera screen is small, and the used disk space would be too big. Adapt the "Frame/Sec" value according to your source. Mine has 25fps, so I choose 25. But it could be anything else. To check the framerate of the source, use a tool like MediaInfo.
- In the "AUDIO" part, choose a sampling frequency of "11025", and "1" under Channels. Higher values make little sense here, since the speaker of the camera is not Hi-Fi-Stereo anyway.
- Launch the encoding process with the "Encode (Active Files)" button at the bottom.
- After the encoding is done, you should find the new file in the same directory as your source file. Copy that file to your SD-card under "DCIM/100CASIO" (where your camera saves the photos anyway) and rename it to CIMGxxxx.AVI, where "xxxx" is a number lower than your current index on the camera. Mine is beyond 2500 (the latest photo I shot got the file name CIMG2517.JPG), so I can use numbers in the 1000 range safely. Sizes vary between 15 and 20MB/min most of the time. This means, you should be able to put about 4 hours of video on a 4GB SD-card.