This app was mentioned in 153 comments, with an average of 2.66 upvotes
I am absolutely loving timbre. It's pretty much the first audio/video editor that actually works. And it's fucking gorgeous. And it's completely free! (no IAPs, no ads)
Seriously, give it a shot if you haven't already :)
I can't believe nobody has mentioned Timbre. It's a free (ad-free/no-iap!) and absolutely gorgeous audio/video editor. It has been all over /r/androidapps this past week.
Shoutout to /u/iamxeus for making such an incredible app
Someone recommended Timbre last time and I am absolutely loving it. It's a music/video editor app for cutting/joining/converting/changing bitrate etc. And it's absolutely gorgeous. And it's free.
Definitely worth checking out :)
I'm looking for a video editor that does basic actions like cutting, joining, adjusting speed. I don't need filters and effects. Open Source would be great.
I'm basically looking for Timbre but without subscription or ads.
Timbre can do all of that, and a bit more. It works really great.
Probably not the ideal solution, but you could use an app like Timbre to combine the files of two songs into one file. Only thing is is that you're going to have to edit the tags of the newly created file to get it to fit into your music collection correctly.
My Samsung Note has built in screen recording software "for games" so I told it my reddit app was a game and then recorded "gameplay" of the video playing. I have a decent all purpose audio utility app (Timbre) to rip the audio from the video (and trim it a little).
You could always just Google the file type...
https://www.howtogeek.com/200736/what-is-an-mkv-file-and-how-do-you-play-them/
You could try using VLC player to make the playback faster or you can try converting the file into something more mainstream like mp4. use Timbre if you're.going to convert
Well I mean, if you've tried it all you could always convert the file to something like an MP3 or M4A
If you want to covert audio on your phone I'd recommend using Timbre as the app of choice :)
Hello, there's Timbre which was the only one I've seen mentioned in this category.
I've only used it to cut audio though.
If you absolutely have to use the phone, I'd try that, otherwise you could just use a PC.
I think you can use Jumpcutter via Termux. I haven't used it myself though. Timbre is also a decent video editor but i don't think it can trim silent parts
...add music or cut some scenes or add some transitions.
add music -...no recompressing of the video track required , adding like merging/voice over an existing audio track would require recompessing the audio track , alternatively you add a second audio track (then a container format like mkv is required)
or cut some scenes : no recompressing of the video/audio tracks is required
or add some transitions : recompressing of the video/audio tracks is required
That is necessary to understand - depending of your actions -see above- a compression is inevitable with the best app...
Try https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
Try Timbre. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre It's free. There's an option called "Extract Frame" in the video section that does what you're asking. It allows you to pick frame values from 0.01 seconds of a frame to up to 1 minute. It's pretty specific but check it out if it works for you. Be aware that there are ads so if you use it for the long run maybe go for the premium which is $4.95 to buy if not just turn your wifi/mobile data off to not be annoyed by them or leave them be.
Use this app named Timbre - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
Edit: by default, you won't find the option to convert the video to mpg. Click on the three dots near output format and add the mpg format to the list.
Screenshot
Honestly, while Google photos is great it's still missing some key features to make it a one stop shop for common photo/video needs.
I personally use the app Timbre https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
It works for quick audio and video editing and had a gif maker for videos specifically.
I've been following Timbre since it was launched on /r/androidapps last year, have been using it ever since. I can't imagine going to something else now for video editing. Highly recommended.
That link doesn't even load for me.
> How the heck do I easily share a video
Ever heard of YouTube? :)
> perhaps convert to gif?
That's an option. You could convert to gif using Timbre and then upload it on Imgur.
Use timbre. You can manually set start & finish time for perfect precision. And it's an all in one app that has basic audio-video editing tools.
Hey again! Did you get a chance to check out Timbre's latest update? I've added a bunch of new features including the ability to extract audio from a video or completely remove all audio from a video.
Please do let me know how it works out for you now and feel free to reach out to me if you face any issues or have any more feature requests :)
NewPipe + Timbre + Automatag.
This way, you can download songs from Youtube with NewPipe, trim them with Timbre, then rename the file and set the metadata for the song using Automatag.
Edit: Links
NewPipe: https://f-droid.org/app/org.schabi.newpipe
Timbre: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
Automatag: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.fillobotto.mp3tagger
Check out Timbre.
It's literally the first link on the Play Store when searching the name. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
I call it Timbre. I didn't initially plan on releasing it but thought it might help out others. It's completely free and I have no plans to monetize this ever.
Here's the icon and a few screenshots: 1, 2, 3.
Currently the app supports the following features (for both audio & video):
I'd love to hear some feedback and I'm actively looking for feature requests to expand the app :)
Check out Timbre. I only use it for making my own notification sounds but clipping an hour long audio file should not be a problem.
Link: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
personally I use Timbre, it does audio and video. it's a very smooth experience
Use timbre. Open the app & select Extract frame , now for precise timing , you can manually Select a frame, just like this. . Now click on that round button to save that frame from video.
Try Timbre.
Timbre for the basic stuff, AndroVid for text/effects, both free.
Also, Simple Gallery Pro (paid, one of the best gallery apps on the market) added all that editing features a few days ago, but I have not tried it yet.
Check out Timbre
Edit: Whoops, nevermind.. Timbre isn't FOSS, sorry about that
When editing, image editing doesn't translate well to video editing. Because codecs.
You can cut the starting and finishing point of a video with the built-in editor of the OnePlus Gallery app. You are able to do it because, when using .mp4 files (the extension/codec almost everyone uses nowadays), it's easy to modify the starting and finishing point of the video... Because you don't have to modify the rest of it.
Now, rotation is another whole story. Because mp4 coding is actually quite complex, if you want to actually edit the video, you would have to decompress the entire video in its different frames (which is very expensive in terms of memory), rotate each one of the frames, and recompress/recode the video again using mp4. Even using an actual computer, you will need a somewhat semi-professional video editor, and the computer would need time to recode the rotated video.
It's a mp4 thing, the idea is that the coding is complex so that is highly optimized so that you can easily reproduce a video even in a brick with a screen (not literally, but you need like 10x less resources to play a video than to create one). This is because the mp4 codec does not encode the actual frames, but rather the differences and displacements observed in consecutive frames. So, if you rotate the video, you have to recalculate the differences and displacements again, since the dimensions of the video have been inverted.
And why code? Well, because the raw non-compressed data of a video is huge. I think raw HD videos have a bitrate of 3GB per second of video, may be wrong. Even when applying jpeg compression (the usual codec used for images in most cameras nowadays) to each frame, the resulting video is still huge (that exists, btw, and it's called M-JPEG). So... time difference coding was introduced.
But, with a little bit of googling, I have found that you can actually just edit the information associated to the video (called the metadata), and indicate that the pixels of the video must be rotated. Source: https://forum.videohelp.com/threads/367508-MP4-orientation-issues You would have still to technically recode the video, but it seems easier. And the Timbre app has a built-in ffmpeg (the general name for the mpx codecs, including mp4) console. Haven't tried, tho, but it looks promising.
And related to the rotation failure... I usually wait to confirm that the camera has correctly rotated before starting to use it (the icons rotate as well). I sometimes even have to re-rotate the phone so it detects that I want to record something in landscape. For me, it has always been like that for all the mobiles I have owned.
>I'd like something similar for videos as well.
I've heard good things about Timbr for video editing.
I use Timbre when in such need and I really like it.
I use this app called Timbre that works very well. Don't know if it will keep tags and stuff but it's free and you can give it a go.
I'm not sure if it has all these features, but Timbre has at least most of them.
Have you tried Timbre?
It's amazing.
Just use this app: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
Don't know if it has what you're looking for, but the editing app I use on my phone is Timbre, maybe there's something in it for you.
Do you even link
I'll have to agree, Timbre is insane.
Last time I got great feedback for the user interface, this time I'd love to hear some thoughts on my app's actual working.
I recently released Timbre an audio/video editing app that actually works without ads popping up every 3 seconds (Imagine that!). You can cut/join/convert audio and video files etc.
Here's the icon. And the home screen and this is what a typical editor screen looks like, a music/video player at the top, a bunch of options at the bottom.
I have no plans to monetize this. In fact I just made this for myself but then I thought other people might find it useful too.
Let me know what you think :)
I am absolutely loving Timbre, literally the only working (and free!) music editor on the play store.
Hopefully this helps you. You should not need the IAPs.
- Timbre: Cut, Join, Convert Mp3 Audio & Mp4 Video - Apps on Google Play - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
Are you referring to this app?
Try Timbre
Did you try timbre ?
Timbre: Cut, Join, Convert Mp3 Audio & Mp4 Video - Apps on Google Play - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
Timbre uses ffmpeg and lets you specify your own command arguments, contains ads.
Also Google Earth if it counts
Timbre might help, does audio too, very simple interface.
Check out "Timbre: Cut, Join, Convert Mp3 Audio & Mp4 Video" - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
Check out "Timbre: Cut, Join, Convert Mp3 Audio & Mp4 Video" - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
Simple and free android app: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
Give Timbre a try
I've used Timbre (Link to Play Store) and it seems to work fine for me.
Timbre is pretty good
Timbre is the one I use. Works like a charm if you just want something for trimming videos.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
Best app for this on the play store, free to boot
Timbre. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre It does everything u mentioned & much more
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
Timbre will do more than just gifs, but it's friendly to work with.
Also try timbre. It can also cut, split, join, omit part from audio and video.
Hmm, try Timbre? I know from others it's a good free video editing app.
Disclaimer: sorry, haven't used it myself
I know Timbre to be a decent video and audio editing tool. I don't think it has built in samples like Garageband though
Did you try timbre?
ask the guy from https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xeus.timbre
Timbre. Probably the best ad-free , simpliest, beautiful UI and with active developer app that I knows!
I believe music downloaded using NewPipe is in m4a format. Perhaps you can use Timbre to convert it to mp3 then edit the tags from there
Not quite what you're saying, but this is pretty close. Have you tried it?
You can try timbre