MPEG Streamclip can also download videos from YouTube and Google by entering the page URL. It can play many movie files, not only MPEGs it can convert MPEG files between muxed/demuxed formats for authoring it can encode movies to many formats, including iPod it can cut, trim and join movies. The info has helped me immensely.Ĭomments are closed.MPEG Streamclip is a powerful free video converter, player, editor for Mac and Windows. I observed your web site from a google search, and was glad i did. Robyn- Marketing Communications, YouSendIt So drop us a line and let us know what features you’d like to see, or what things just aren’t working for you! And, we’re always open to feedback from frequent users. It’s just our way of saying “thanks” for talking us up and trying us out. Accounts will be upgraded for 30 days, then revert back to the free version when it expires. Simply create a free account, then go to “my account”/”account details” and enter this code. Thanks for spreading the news! … Pass this promo code along to your readers for 1 free month of our Business Plus plan: RHORBP12. You’ll also see we’ve got plug-ins for Photoshop and Outlook as well….AND- Final Cut Pro is on our “ToDo List” (The folders just zip right up and send!- and the MAC version, still a bit behind, will catch up soon!) With the PC version you can even drag and drop multiple files or folders as large as 2GB each. Side note of self interruption: After a 12 hr work day- “Giggling Grant” made my night!įirst, thanks for using and talking about YouSendIt! Have you checked out Express, the free YouSendIt desktop application? It’s super convenient and will provide up to 25% faster uploads. Your blog was picked up by my YouSendIt google alerts and I thought I’d drop in a comment… And finally, when I make videos and want to show a highlight of someone else (usually ask permission if I’m not sure they’ll say yes). Also- sometimes you lose a video and have to go rescue it from Revver or something. ![]() Marquis- this is for demuxing your own clips if they’re old (like these, which I captured via MPEG on my digital camera). If you’re on Mac and want an easy way to rip videos from the web, try Tasty Apps. Got any better tips for solving PC/Mac or Mac/PC conversion problems? Please comment below!Īddition December 19: Thanks ChristopherMast for pointing out iSquint. Here’s another site with a buttload of information about file conversions. Still, Streamclip is free (thanks, guys) and has a lot of different import and export/convert options that I would have thought would come with Quicktime Professional or Flip4Mac’s WMV professional studio (and I have no idea what I just payed $100 for, since WMV can’t solve this, and I’m not quite sure what it does otherwise). There are lots of different CODECs (ways to code them), and some versions are Mac friendly and others aren’t. This may not solve all problems because the file extensions “.mov and. I next locked the audio and video using Apple-L (a nice trick Charles Trippy taught me). ![]() mov files, then import the audio separately as AIFFs (which I created in Streamclip). mov files, I had to import the videos as Quicktime. ![]() To patch up this “Grant Giggles” video built from ancient. But at least you can import the audio portion, since AIFF exports separately, and imports as audio to iMovie without problems. Next, select “File>Demux>Demux to M2V and AIFF.” This may give you a strange video file that still won’t open in Quicktime or iMovie. So you need to demux the puppies.įirst, download and launch MPEG Streamclip, and then open your problem video file. That’s because iMovie doesn’t support muxed files. The odd part is that the clips sometimes play fine on Quicktime but won’t import into iMovie. When I do collaboration videos, I’m often sending large files (using free Pando software or YouSendIt), and the video files usually work fine.īut sometimes video files present problems because they are muxed (the audio and video are mixed). It also allows you to rip videos from YouTube and other video sites (see picture), and save them in a variety of ways. Today, after spending $100 on Flip4Mac’s WMV and upgrading to Quicktime Pro, I found the solution in free software from Squared 5. ![]() Then you finally figure it out, but the next time you forget what you did. That, of course, plunges you into countless hours of Google searches, flings you into the black hole of forum & help sites, and ultimately convinces you to buy several $20 downloads that don’t work. Or the dreaded white screen with working audio. You import an MPEG, Quicktime (.mov) or AVI into iMovie, and get a video with no audio.
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