John -
I've been playing with this for the last hour or so. There's something going on with Magic Motion that isn't clear to me yet... i.e. I don't have a definite assessment!
I set up a 4:3 project that has a series of images (same resolution as yours 2592x1944)
1. the original image (no zoom)
2. the same image with MM zoom applied
3. a snapshot of the last frame of the zoomed image...
When viewed at High, Normal or Low resolution, there is a stark difference in image quality at the

point above. At that point it snaps from blurry to clear in one frame! When viewed in preview in Full HD or HD, the difference isn't so clear.
► Exactly the same thing occurred with your Coors Light image. Thank you for posting that.
There's a full HD demo uploading to YouTube right now, illustrating the above. I'll post the link when it's finished processing.
The good news is that it
doesn't appear to affect the produced file... but I still wonder why it's occurring!
* Perhaps someone who understands more about how PD is processing the images might be able to shed some light.
¸.·´¯`·.´¯`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸><(((º>
On the
YouTube question, it rather depends what your requirements are. Quality or speed? A balance of both?
Personally, I wouldn't be posting AVIs on YouTube. Depending on the nature of the video, I'd choose AVC H.264 or MPEG-4 for quality. If size/time were important factors, I'd use a high res WMV profile.
An important thing, since we're talking about Magic Motion, is to make sure the video bitrate isn't too low. In my investigations earlier, I produced and MPEG-4 (1920x1080) with a bitrate of 3MBps. The motion sections looked terrible. I ditched that idea! I produced to AVC H.264 using a 1440x1080 profile @ 18MBps & it was crisp & clean

(and a lot bigger)
So - which format & profile you choose is based on your needs. If I was putting "product" for people to see, I'd take the time to upload the best quality video I could.
Cheers - Tony
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