and to download the video without having to use a shitty website that rips youtube videos... (PS.: needs VLC media player)
Open VLC Player
Ctrl-N / command-N (to open Network location)
Paste youtube URL above - press Play
Ctrl-I / command-I (to open video information)
Location Field - copy the long link in there (...googlevideo.com/videoplayback?...)
Paste link into your browser address bar
Ctrl-S / command-S to save a backup copy of the video to your computer
Huh. I was wondering why this looked familiar: I took that photo in Berlin, during the QtCon 2016.
Good to see u/jbkempf and VLC getting some love outside the Free Software bubble. I had the opportunity of talking to him live and he told me how they have to fight off patent trolls and aggressive copyright lawyers all the time. He also told me a fun story about the beginning of the project.
Download Handbrake, it's an open source video encoder. Running your exported video through it will optimize it and reduce the file size greatly. Then I generally also remove the audio (unnecessary for a gif), and reduce the resolution (gfycat displays it at a lower res anyways).
Open VLC Player
Ctrl-N / command-N (to open Network location)
Paste youtube URL above - press Play
Ctrl-I / command-I (to open video information)
Location Field - copy the long link in there (...googlevideo.com/videoplayback?...)
Paste link into your browser address bar
Ctrl-S / command-S to save a backup copy of this ad so you can enjoy your dinner now and watch the ad later...
Actually yeah, that is good news!
This particular glitch is a keyframe getting missed on playback, which is often caused by the video being outright corrupted with missing data.
But if it's skipping in Premiere but not VLC, then it's probably fixable and very possibly the result of variable framerate media. Is this a screen recording by any chance?
Anyway the fix should be pretty straightforward, you just need to transcode it.
Simplest way to do that is by using Shutter Encoder to either ProRes or h.264.
Shutter Encoder uses the same codecs as VLC (via FFmpeg) so if VLC can play it, Shutter can transcode it.
The program, Handbrake, its a fantastic piece of open sourced software that is amazing at encoding any dvd I've ever thrown at it. Also can convert videos to be formatted for your phone, you know, if you feel the need to watch Ratatouille while you're taking a shit or something.
​
Only thing I do with the shadowplay footage is edit and render to .mp4 with streamclip at 90% quality using Apple MPEG4 compressor at original zoom/frame size, uploaded result directly to gfycat, didn't change any of the other settings/options.
Well, it’s a really annoying process. Firsty, I use Ibis paint x and Imovie to cut in the text onto a video. Then I convert the video to a gif on cloudconvert.com, then I crop that gif on ezgif.com. It would be a lot easier for me if I could crop videos, but on IOS 12, it seems basically impossible so far, since I can’t even download videos online. (And I don’t want to update my phone)
4chan autists went through the trial video and found a blip of ADA Kraus' computer showing a copy of the video-encoding software Handbrake in a folder. It's exactly what one would use to do what Kraus said he didn't know how to do - generate a lower-quality copy of a video. The court should've taken his laptop as evidence.
Handbrake is an open-source, simple tool for converting video from nearly any format to a selection of modern, widely supported codecs. Invaluable when you don't want to send over 4K phone videos and only have a minute.
There's a powerful tool called FFMPEG, that's widely known as a command line tool. If command line isn't the thing for you, there's handbrake, or an ffmpeg tool another redditor made
Maybe I can also Recommend Tubemate Works like youtube but you get to download the video
In a variety of different resolutions
You can convert straight to MP3 or whathaveyou
It has a recommended Video to MP3 Converter for if you want to download at a higher quality and convert to a better sounding MP3 or whatever
You can queue up as many Videos to Download as you want and it'll download 2 at a time
It'll download to whereever you want, including on SD card for people with locked main storage
It has the option to delete your download history with or without the Videos saved on your phone
You can watch videos through it (Looks just like youtube)
If you prefer normal youtube it'll give you the option to Download the video when you hit the "Share" in the normal youtube app, All you gotta do is choose the Tubemate Icon and it''ll open the app, go to the video, prepare it for downloading and then you just is choose a resolution
There are a few that are good enough for music management, but they don't seem to sync up with iOS devices as well as iTunes itself does (I'm assuming that's a requirement here).
I'd say give MediaMonkey a look. It seems to be the one with most features (including iOS device syncing) and it's free too. I've used it myself in the past and found it pretty easy to get to grips with.
Omg so fucking obvious.
Pro-Tip for reporting: You can upload clips of this douchebag, but the max file size is 50mb :/
So its gonna be hard to get a full game in. however you can upload multiple clips. I use a tool named 'handbreak' to 'convert' my clips from 1080p to 720p so the file gets smaller. its open source and free, no nonsense adds etc. https://handbrake.fr/
If they’re strange video files something like VLC media player might be able to open it, it’s open source so it’s able to open most video files.
Here’s a link to it: https://www.videolan.org/vlc/index.html
You may want to grab Handbrake and re-encode the videos with the black bars cut out (preferably from the original source). Or use FFMPEG if you're handy with command line tools. If you have a few like that you can queue them up and let it run over night.
On a related note, VLC is something of a swiss army knife of media. Those who don't yet make it available to users through their internal app-stores should consider doing that. After updating to VLC 3.0.7, of course!
Use Handbrake, select the Vimeo/YouTube preset you'd like and re-encode it. Most capture software for games uses the least amount of compression to keep from pulling cpu/ram/gpu resources away from the game.
​
^(edit: fixed spelling, add link)
MediaMonkey is 10x better than iTunes for managing your music library if anyone is interested in an alternative. It's a fine player too. The interface is not quite the eye-candy that apple's products are, but it's pretty great.
On Rekieta Law's live stream, they just played a clip from the prosecution's closing on Monday that was being played from Kraus' computer.
He has Handbrake on his laptop........
If i remember well resolve on linux can't import videos with a codec of h.264/h.265
Try to transcode them to an editing codec like DNxHD with a software like shutter encoder and then try again.
How do you not have VLC? You need this program in your life.
It's the play anything do anything video player. So many settings and options you can configure.
You can view and record from a webcam, convert videos, stream files to and from with it and edit MP3 tags. along with other great stuff.
All that for the low cast of 0$ because it's free and open source.
One problem is that some people will just google their apps on Linux and try to install them like its 1999 (or typical Windows) instead of using a package manager, Gnome Software or KDE Discover.
Documentation isn't really the problem either. I think those people don't go in thinking they have to learn a new OS but rather believe the paradigms of Windows should still apply to everything instead of searching for 'how to install software on Linux' or their distro of choice.
I just looked up random handbrake installation instructions with some different searches and they all either tell you to use the package manager and how (usually apt) or on the actual Handbrake downloads page it tells you to use Flatpak and how. Even going back to the first 1.0.0 release instructions to tells you to use apt. It is apparent that person didn't even read Handbrake's own download and install instructions.
If you don't mind using the command line, ffmpeg is the ideal recommendation and is most likely the software that most of these websites use behind the scenes, and it isn't that difficult to use just for straight conversion. If you need something with a GUI then I'd probably recommend Handbrake. Both are free and open source
FFmpeg is the tool for this, but if you don't want to mess around with system path variables, command line, and shell scripts, you can use Shutter Encoder to run FFmpeg commands in bulk.
Add all the files to the list, then where it says 'output 1' click 'change' and set an output directory (so you don't mix the new files up with the old ones.)
Paste the following command into the 'function' box (it's an editable text box):
ffmpeg -ss 00:00:06 -c:v libx264 -cq 24 -c:a aac -b:a 192k -c:s copy -map 0
And set Ext/Filter to .mp4 and click 'start function.'
This process may result in the files being a bit larger than they were to start with.
You could also try:
ffmpeg -ss 00:00:06 -c copy -map 0
however it will end up with not exactly 6 seconds getting trimmed off the video, so on some videos some of the noise you're trying to remove may still be there.
I can confirm that DVD Decryptor still works for 99% of DVDs, even though it's old AF.
Once you rip the disc with DVD Decryptor, use Handbrake to export it to a .mp4 or .mkv.
For the next time I would recommend trying webm instead of gif. Better quality with less space. One of the easiest ways to do this would most likely be https://cloudconvert.com/ no need for any software + no watermarks.
I don't trust buying digital-only movies, so I usually get a DVD. However, I don't want to have to use the discs all the time, so I've ripped them all using HandBrake and now they're all available immediately and awesomely.
> for people who don't know how to make a Movie collection
It isn't difficult, if you're interested. You just need a computer and a lot of disk space.
> VLC is specifically closed source
What? Go to their main page and read the first sentence. Then go here for the source code.
Also... what does VLC specifically have to do with anything?
Handbrake is fantastic. But having been down this road, let me tell you what I would have done differently.
I owned hundreds (maybe thousands) of DVD's. I cleaned out Blockbuster when they went out of business and had quite a selection of movies. Then I'd also pick up BR's when they were cheap so I had them, too. And I thought, like you maybe, that I'd save a lot of space in my home if I ripped them to hard disks.
And so I spent a lot of money on hard disks and a simple server to run Plex on. And I went through the tedious work of ripping all of my movies, putting them on Plex.
But DVD's are only 480p. They look like shit in 2018 when pretty much everyone is buying 4k TV's.
Honestly, looking back, I wish I'd just gotten rid of the DVD's by any means necessary. This year I retired the plex server. I poked around with a few streaming services and found the right combination that gives the members of my family the content we want. No more servers in the house. No more movie ripping. If we want to watch something, chances are it's available on one of the streaming services we're already paying for, or we can rent it through iTunes. And it'll look great.
If I subscribed to a few streaming services and rented any movie I want to watch, including ones I'd previously bought on DVD, it would be cheaper in terms of annual costs to do that than to preserve them on disk.
You can convert it to a wmv and then use DreamScene atleast on Windows 7
Xbox game bar does weird stuff with resolution in the video file, Premiere doesn't like it and thinks the resolution is higher than the video actually is (basically.)
You need to transcode the footage before you import. Use Shutter Encoder, transcode to ProRes 422 or h.264 if you're short of space and replace the clips in your project with the transcodes.
Xbox game bar footage is also variable framerate which can cause issues, and since the fix to that is transcoding as well you get two birds with one stone ;-)
>wanted to build a digital library rather than a physical one
Do both. Handbrake is your friend. I digitized my library a few years ago and have been very pleased to not have to search for the discs when I want to watch something.
If buying the physical copy is cheaper buy it and rip it to your library.
My solution is to buy physical copies (i.e. bluray) and rip them. I've got ~25 or so movies and a few TV show seasons sitting on my NAS this way. All legal, just bypassing their idiotic content protection schemes - all the convenience of piracy, without the piracy (well, not exactly - I still have to buy and rip the movies, but when I'm actually in the mood to watch something I already have I'm good to go).
I use MakeMKV to rip my movies, currently free software (as in beer). I don't typically do anything with compression/formatting since VLC works fine as is and I don't have to worry about space - whenever I do (such as putting something on my tablet/phone), I use Handbrake.
Resuelto chicos! Ahí convertí uno a MP4, cuando lleguen los demás enlaces se lo vuelvo a enviar.
De paso aprovecho y les dejo este enlace Descargar conversor . Ese conversor es free y no hay formato que se le resista.
Judging by the filename, I'm guessing your working with OBS or Shadowplay recordings?
Screen recordings are almost always variable framerate, which causes a huge number of issues in Premiere, one of which is extremely slow or failing exports.
Grab Shutter Encoder and convert all the footage you're using to either ProRes or h.264, then replace the media in your project.
I'd bet on VFR being the cause of this issue, but another cause for stuck exports is running out of free space on your media cache/boot drive, espevially if you're exporting a very long video.
I used MediaMonkey for about 5,000 files. It took me around 3-4 hours to rename all the songs, update ID3 tags, get album art, and move to proper folder. It's time-consuming still, but you only have to do it once. If I trusted the automatic tools a little better, it would have taken even less time.
The video in question was not entered into evidence in it's HD form, was intentionally doctored before being give n to the defense after it would have been of any use, and there is clear evidence of it all. This prosecutor also lied that he was not tech savvy, freeze frame shows he had Handbrake on the computer he supposedly sent it from along with different file names, sizes, and creation dates.
This should be a mistrial with prejudice and the prosecutor should be charged with evidence tampering, lying to the court, and more.
If you don't know what Handbrake is: https://handbrake.fr/
Nice. I used the animated version as a background using r/videopaper and converting the webm format to mp4. I've used this site for the conversion.
https://cloudconvert.com/webm-to-mp4
It's pretty easy to do. Don't forget to set your own resolution for the video before conversion and set the wallpaper settings in Windows to slideshow, loop 1 day. You can get the video from the official site;
https://www.masseffect.com/netstorage/videos/MEA-keyart-HEROLARGE.webm
I get by fine with <code>mplayer</code> or, when I need playlists and remote control, <code>mpd</code>. It's particularly nice that mpd
doesn't lock you in to one broken GUI frontend. You have literally dozens of broken frontends to choose from ;)
Premiere preferences > Audio Hardware > Input device > Set to 'no input'
(Your footage is also VFR so it would be a really good idea to transcode it to h.264 or prores in Shutter Encoder before importing to Premiere.)
This is a known bug specifically with Varicam footage for some reason.
First off try updating Premiere just incase they've staged the fix within the last week.
Otherwise your options (other than waiting for the fix to be rolled into the main release) are:
Use Premiere 2020 for this edit.
Or use Premiere Beta where the issue is apparently fixed (wouldn't recommend for actual projects!)
Or rewrap the video files and transcode the audio. You could use Shutter Encoder for this in the 'rewrap' function with 'filter' set to MXF. Then under 'Audio settings' select 'convert' and try 'PCM 32bit' which should be totally lossless. This may break the Panasonic video format which could mean you have problems with metadata later on if that's something you require in your workflows.
Handbrake is an awesome tool for converting videos to decent sizes, and while the UI is not completely intuitive I do think I already managed to extract part of a timeline.
Otherwise if you're on Windows, Movie Maker is decent enough, or you could also search among open source video editors which are usually malware-free.
Footage from a DJI drone by any chance?
If that's what you've got, use Shutter Encoder to convert the offending clips to ProRes, and replace them in your project.
If that's your problem, this could be a symptom of the SD card in your drone not being fast enough or underperforming. The newer DJI drones apparently swap to variable framerate in the event they can't write data fast enough to the card, and the resulting VFR footage causes this kind of issue with Premiere.
Credit to this Stack Overflow answer
Short Answer: You can't rip a DVD directly to a torrent file.
Long Answer: The torrent file is nothing more then a file containing the data needed to download the file (basically no different then a download link). You have to first use some tool to rip the video off of the DVD. I like to use MakeMKV for ripping a .MKV video file off the disc. If needed, you can use a tool like Handbrake to convert it to an MP4. Then, use your bittorrent client (I use qBittorrent) to create the .torrent file from the video file and make sure that you are seeding it. Then, you can share the .torrent file on said website
When you're exporting it, you're transcoding the video to a new bitrate.
So if you want the filesize to be the same, you need to reduce the export bitrate to match whatever the OG file is - but this will reduce the quality.
But there's a better solution for this!
Export just the audio from your editor, then use Shutter Encoder's 'replace audio' function to combine the new audio with the OG video.
The filesize will be pretty much the same, and the video quality won't be affected at all.
Handbrake kann man im Allgemeinen nur empfehlen. Übersichtliche Oberfläche, open source, wird stetig weiterentwickelt...
Und als Codec x265, falls die Abspielhardware das unterstützt.
Anyone has been able to compile and offer ARM64 Win32 apps since Microsoft released the SDK in May. See for example https://www.videolan.org/vlc/download-windows.html
As for Chrome coming to the Store, I doubt it. Google probably wouldn't want to distribute it via the Store even if they were allowed to.
If you're really tired of twitches bullshit hit them where it hurts, in the pocket.
Check out Streamlink. It kills ALL of their advertisements by streaming through VLC.. Then you can just open up the pop out chat through your browser.
It's a great tool.
Not sure if it does .mov but you may want to check out https://handbrake.fr
Its open source
Edit: Pretty sure it does .mov as we used to use it to convert some speaker's video presentations at my old job as an AV tech
I'm about 99% sure this guy just ripped the 5.1 surround sound channels from the 10th Anniversary DVD-A and made a stereo mix out of them all.
If you happen to own the DVD-A version (the SACD version isn't the same), ripping the separate channels is pretty easy. I use this program to rip DVD-As (With Teeth has a surround sound mix as well!). If any of you have ever heard a remix of Ruiner called "Ruiner (Reconstructed)", that remix was done using the surround sound files and gave me tons of separation between all of the instruments. There's lots of weird details brought up in the mix, and being able to isolate all 5 channels really gives you a chance to dissect all of the layers.
MediaMonkey all the way. I use it to rip all my CDs and convert them to FLAC. I organize them with proper tags and file names. I then sync the collection with my iPod, which means that all the songs are automatically converted to mp3s.
I'm going to use my psychic media format detection power and guess that the drone is a recent DJI model?
If it is, your problem is variable framerate media. Grab Shutter Encoder, transcode the source clips to ProRes, and replace the footage in your project.
You might want to double check/test the SD cards that you're using on the drone, as when this has come up before (and it has a lot in /r/premiere!) a DJI user chimed in and suggested the cause was the SD cards not being fast enough to cope with the recording, so the drone drops the framerate to prevent the recording from cutting out.
If he absolutely wants to upload to youtube then you should look into compressing the video with Handbrake first. It doesn't affect the quality at all but reduces the file size drastically.
Handbrake is a pretty good tool for x265 encoding.
Here's a post giving an example of Handbrake's usage. That post is by JoyBell, a kat.cr user known for the highest quality x265 encodes.
Although I haven't experienced this exact issue myself, is hazard a guess that VLC player (https://www.videolan.org/vlc/index.en-GB.html) will be able to extract any thing salvageable from the video file.
Video files are written to disk in a stream of data, the beginning part can be absolutely fine even if the tail end didn't get written correctly. Some players will expect to be able to read both ends of the file before playing the video and if the tail end is damaged/missing, they will refuse to play even the good part.
I've seen VLC player behave better and play partly damaged files in the past.
I've been using media monkey gold for years. Amazing program, plays flac and other loss less codecs, can still sync your apple device. There's a free version that's just as functional! check it out. http://www.mediamonkey.com/
Use a good video converter to transcode your material. (Handbrake is free). Quicktime is optimal but some H264 does work too. CS6 at this point is ancient. I don't know what codec you are using but certainly it doesn't help.
Try Handbrake. https://handbrake.fr/
Pro-tip. If you're looking for a specific type of software, and all you can find are crap versions that have watermarking, trials, paywalls, etc. Just look up what you need, and attach GNU to the end of the search result. Or GPL.
Basically there's an entire community dedicated to creating free software, and it's really awesome. All the tools I use are free and available for anyone to use. Most of the software you'll find is for linux, but someone has probably made a windows port at some point, since it'd be open source.
Get a 128×128 PNG file with the icon you want and then convert it to an ICNS file (you could use this website). Then, name it .VolumeIcon.icns using Terminal and save it in the appropriate location. For Windows, that’s the root of the default EFI partition; I did it on macOS by mounting said partition (disk0s1 in my case) and just moving it there. For macOS, it needs to be put inside APFS Volume Preboot. Not sure what your level of experience is with Terminal and stuff, but lemme know if you require any further assistance.
ffmpeg should support that format if you want to convert them. Handbrake should be another option if you prefer GUIs.
FFMpeg be as easy as
ffmpeg -i notporn.avi -vcodec h264 -acodec aac -strict -2 notporn.mp4
Beware, it is a gateway drug.
Some immediate advice: keep a bash script with all the packages you install ala "sudo apt-get install ..." and any setting changes so it is even easier to reload the machine.
Also, I recommend getting an old desktop, loading your favorite distro, and then running it as a server. I use mine as a backup (with rsync and ssh, which you can set up cron jobs for), website (with LAMP [Linux, Apache, MySQL, and PHP] and a bootstrap webpage), as well as a media server (with samba for file browsing and Emby for a slick web interface).
Finally, an absolute must: Handbrake for ripping DVDs, but learn how to install it by with the ppa.
it's open source, so there's no funny business going on... at least.. if there were it would have to be in plain sight in the code which is publicaly available...
VLC is free because the people who work on it believe in free and open software. if i recall correctly the original coder was offered a lot of cash for it but turned it down on principal. don't know much more about it than that.
I've been watching all the ones posted here in frame-by-frame, and they actually aren't very clean.
Download the video/gif, use a video player such as vlc
or mpv
where you can jump frame-by-frame with a keypress, and you'll see what I mean. This will help you for all future videos/gifs posted here:
VLC download link -> https://www.videolan.org/vlc/download-windows.html
Instructions how to do frame-by-frame -> https://www.vlchelp.com/frame-stepping/
"Generally, open source refers to a computer program in which the source code is available to the general public for use and/or modification from its original design. Open-source code is typically created as a collaborative effort in which programmers improve upon the code and share the changes within the community. Open source sprouted in the technological community as a response to proprietary software owned by corporations."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_source
And you'll probably find the code at the projects web-page (usually linking to something like github/sourceforge)
Here, for example, is the VLC Media Player source code:
No, you take a typical phrase, like "linkedinpassword" and run that through an SHA1 converter, like so:
http://www.online-convert.com/result/861c24494f0fc6e0e94f7c54fad52a7f
Then check down your pw list and there it is. There are already tables out there with most common phrases and password combinations hashed in this way.
The problem (apart from how the guy got all this) is that LI didn't salt the hashes which renders this kind of attack moot.
Recommended settings for x264 and x265 encoders:
*RF 18-22 for 480p/576p Standard Definition
*RF 19-23 for 720p High Definition
*RF 20-24 for 1080p Full High Definition
*RF 22-28 for 2160p 4K Ultra High Definition
https://handbrake.fr/docs/en/latest/workflow/adjust-quality.html
This reminds me of the time MPlayer's code was used.
http://www.mplayerhq.hu/design7/news-archive.html
>Basically KiSS Technology is specialized in particular kinds of media hardware, namely DVD and MPEG-4 players, set-top-boxes, and such.
>There is nothing wrong with that.
>However, if a careless user initiates a string search in one of their firmwares:
$ strings KiSS_DP-508_FW2.7.4_PAL.iso | grep -A 3 -B 6 MPSub Microdvd Subrip Subviewer Sami Vplayer Unknown MPSub Subviewer 2.0 Subrip 0.9 Jacosub
Other posters are close...
This isn't strictly a variable framerate issue - although your footage probably is variable framerate, and you'll be solving that problem at the same time by fixing it!
Some game recorders, most notably Xbox Game Bar and Razer Cortex, do a weird thing with the video resolution that doesn't play well with Premiere.
Basically they record at a higher resolution than you think, then add a flag in the file to tell whatever is playing it back to scale the video to the actual size it's supposed to be. Premiere's codecs don't read that flag correctly, and shows you the full resolution, but since there's no data in the pixels you're not supposed to be able to see, you end up with the corrupted border.
You need to transcode your source files using something other than media encoder (such as Shutter Encoder) and replace the footage in your project with the new versions.
You shouldn't need the Avid codec's installed for Premiere, actually if you do have them installed you might want to try uninstalling them - you may have some sort of weird codec conflict, especially if it's an older version than you think.
If all else fails though, you could use Shutter Encoder to transcode them over to ProRes.
Shutter Encoder will solve your problem. Use Apple ProRes or DNxHR and it will make it CFR, you'll be getting HUGE files but you won't lose any significant quality.
Again, who's going to be paying this? Handbrake doesn't even have donations.
https://handbrake.fr/docs/credits.html
>The HandBrake and HandBrake Documentation projects are not accepting monetary donations.
Download a program called handbrake, it's completely free and allows you to convert your dvd collection to mp4 files while still keeping chapter markers etc. It's the first world solution.
It's a command line tool available for Windows, Mac, Linux. WMV to MP4 could look something like this:
ffmpeg -i input.wmv -c:v libx264 -crf 23 -c:a libfaac -q:a 100 output.mp4
You should have a look at the documentation to figure out which set of parameters gets you the best result.
If you prefer a GUI I would suggest Handbrake.
Can't go wrong with handbrake. You're going to need the libdvdcss.dll file though which, if I remember correctly, does come bundled with VLC and you just copy and paste it into Handbrakes install directory.
If your videos are full-size DVD / BD rips, you could save about 75% space by encoding them using x264 codec (in mkv containers). Handbrake is a great beginner level app for this. Be aware, video encoding is extremely intensive and could take many hours per movie depending on your system and the settings you use.
However, if your files are already compressed avi, mp4, mkv or similar, you will not save any space without major loss to quality, and should avoid re-encoding.
Assuming you've still got a working VHS player, get something like this and a copy of Handbrake or similar and rip them to your computer.
If you don't have a working one, you're better off getting any old player from somewhere rather than a special VHS-to-DVD type one, as what's the point of the extra expense after you've finished recoding the cassettes...?
And, in either case, after you're done - just chuck them out, nobody wants them any more, even for free :(
Handbrake! It's the best thing for converting to MP4. Well multithreaded and widely used, plus it's free.
I use it on MKV files if I want to shrink down a Blu-ray rip. Works great.
media monkey. i just throw music in a folder and i tell the program to sort it by artist, then make a subfolder by album and done. you just have to make sure the mp3 tags are accurate. there are scipts that do all kinds of stuff to the tags too.
You would be surprised just how frighteningly powerful MediaMonkey is. Alongside Photoshop and a small handful of games, it's the only reason I still have a Windows partition on my computer.
http://www.mediamonkey.com/ ,works great with syncing ipod and iphone,send me a message if you want the full registered version,you should give t a go,i've been using it for two years,i have 150k songs
Cool play!
For the next time you might want to upload the replay full screen, just go into the highlights folder on the LoL folder in the pc and upload the play here: https://cloudconvert.com/webm-to-mp4
I always use it to convert the dumb .webm file into an actual .mp4
It's online and free:3 just upload the replay and download the video^^
Idk why rito save them with that dumb format but hey maybe there's a really good reason I just don't know
Okay based on my experience I would recommend transcoding your YouTube version to an H.264 Quicktime with a 4:2:0 color profile before uploading to retain as much accurate color information as possible.
If you are unable to do that because of the tools at your disposal then I would recommend Mpeg Streamclip
Typically I use COMPRESSOR, but that's because I'm on a Mac based / Final Cut Studio workflow.
Also it appears there have been several informative posts since I requested the MediaInfo report.
/u/johnwilkesbandwidth comment has useful links / info.
Good luck!
I don't know if this will help solve your issue, but I use this program to convert all my large video files to .mp4
In the converting options you can choose the quality %. If i leave it at 50% the video converts more quickly and the image doesn't suffer too much.
> From what I understand these terminals are quite dumb
Depends if you're using a text mode or the Linux framebuffer. The framebuffer is fully graphical, which means you can view images and play videos.
All game recording Variable framerate footage, Premeire hates it, and it can screw with effects rendering because the plugin doesn't know what frame it's looking at.
Use Shutter Encoder to transcode to ProRes (Big but fast) or h.264 (Slow but smaller.)
Whatever that file is, Premiere can't read it. Is it a FLAC?
You'll need to convert it to another format before you import. Try Shutter Encoder to .wav or .aiff.
Two possible causes...
First off try going into Premiere's preferences > audio hardware and set 'input device' to 'none.'
Secondly, looks like you're working with an OBS recording, so it's going to be variable framerate, which Premiere doesn't work well with. That means you need to transcode your footage before import.
To do that you need to use something other than Media Encoder (because that doesn't like VFR either) such as Shutter Encoder's ProRes or h.264 functions.
For projects you're already editing, you can use the replace footage feature to swap your clips out for the transcoded ones.
Even if VFR isn't the cause of your playback issue, it's something you should get into the habit of doing. VFR can cause all sorts of issues like really slow/glitchy exports and bad performance.
The audio is (probably) in an encrypted digital format that Premiere doesn't natively support.
Grab Shutter Encoder, select the 'rewrap' function and set the filter/extension to mov.
Under 'audio settings' enable 'convert' and run that function.
The video quality shouldn't be affected (unless it's in a codec not supported by mov.)
Premiere doesn't support MKV, and MP4 doesn't (strictly) support multichannel audio.
Simply renaming an MKV to MP4 does not make it an MP4, although it can 'trick' some software it will cause issues elsewhere.
Try Shutter Encoder, use the rewrap function set to .mov.
If all else fails, it also has an 'extract' function and various audio conversion options you could use to get your isolated audio out of there.
But you will be dealing with variable framerate out of OBS, so really you should be transcoding the video to constant framerate ProRes (ideally) or h.264 (if you don't have the room for the ProRes files!)
> 30.08 FPS
It's variable framerate. You need to transcode it to constant framerate before using it in Premiere.
Try Shutter Encoder transcoding preferably to ProRes 422 (but use h.264 if hard drive space is at a premium.)
Then you can replace the affected clips in your project window/bins.
Try another format/preset.
WMV is shakey as all hell, and wouldn't at all be surprised if Microsoft had slipped out an OS update that breaks their compatability with Premiere.
If you need WMV, export a Prores OP1a MXF, then run it through Shutter Encoder so you're not using the Microsoft codecs.
Datamoshing!
Here you go:
https://soundand.design/using-audacity-for-video-glitch-effects-9739e99351c0
(Shutter Encoder might work as an alternative to Prism File Converter if you don't have a mac.)
Check out the Ultimate UHD Drives Guide on the MakeMKV Forum. Any of the non-external ones will likely work fine with a cheap USB-SATA adapter.
You might need to flash the drive you get with an older (or LibreDrive-patched). Some adapters don't allow the drives to be flashed. However this only needs to be done once, so opening your case and plugging in the drive for a few minutes shouldn't be a big deal.
Don't forget you will need MakeMKV to do the actual ripping. It's $50, but Mike puts a free beta key on the forum every few months. Definitely support him if you can.
No problem. I saw this gif a long while back and thought the same thing, but forgot about it. Now since I have a program that lets me do things like cut out sections of a video relatively easily; I thought, why not?
The program is called 'Handbrake' by the way.
First of all, windows media player sucks. You should download VLC because it is better in just about every way if you are looking to playback content.
If it plays sped up in VLC as well, then the transcoding in Tune4Win is likely the issue. I would also recommend using handbrake to do video transcoding.
> I don't want to "rip" the movie and store it in ITunes because that violates the copyright law.
No it wouldn't. You are totally within your rights to rip the movie.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ripping#Circumvention_of_DVD_copy_protection
Use Handbrake to rip the movie. https://handbrake.fr/