This was visible from the birth of KDE. But then again the reason for all those features is actually has nothing to do with the toolkit since it's the ideas and believe systems that define us thus even by a slight change of the "philosophy" any toolkit can be used to make a very powerful, features-rich application nonetheless.
In that sense, if you were looking for an easy to use yet powerful multimedia converter that comes with a GUI (hopefully :P) which is written in GTK+, then look no further, I don't know about you, but I've found it. It's called "traGtor".
Main features...
*. As said, this is actually a front-end that uses the ffmpeg multimedia library (one of the most efficient ones as well). So all the codecs supported by ffmpeg can be converted using traGtor.
I don't know about the manipulative history... but you gotta respect the way of the Germans... they really know their shi* :D |
*. Change audio/video codec, bitrate, crop (my favourite and one of the important ones if you care about optimizing the output quality and size), and resize (enter values manually).
*. Edit audio sample rate, edit tags, change channels, 2-pass encoding (for the optimal results).
*. Change the output container (MKV, AVI, etc).
*. Change ratio and De-interlace.
You can install traGtor in Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal by following the below instructions.
It's not supported by the Ubuntu repositories at the moment but I'm pretty sure they'll be added when considering the amazing capabilities of this utility. So we have to add their repository first.
Open your GNU/Linux Terminal window and enter the below commands.
wget http://repository.mein-neues-blog.de:9000/PublicKeyNow we can install it using the "apt-get" command as usual.
sudo apt-key add PublicKey
rm PublicKey
echo "deb http://repository.mein-neues-blog.de:9000/ /" | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install tragtor
As said, you have to have the ffmpeg multimedia codecs pack (library actually) to do the actual work. If you haven't already, you can install ffmpeg by using the additional commands, again in your Terminal window.
sudo wget --output-document=/etc/apt/sources.list.d/medibuntu.list http://www.medibuntu.org/sources.list.d/$(lsb_release -cs).list && sudo apt-get --quiet update && sudo apt-get --yes --quiet --allow-unauthenticated install medibuntu-keyring && sudo apt-get --quiet updateThen we can install ffmpeg in Ubuntu 11.04 and the id3v2 (MP3 tag editor) by using the next command.
sudo apt-get install ffmpegThat's it. Now you've installed TraGtor and all its dependencies thus you can start converting any audio/video under the sun in Ubuntu Linux! :D.
sudo apt-get install id3v2
Best gui for ffmpeg. Great video converter.
ReplyDelete@Anonymous,
ReplyDeleteYep... it's pretty powerful :).
This program can be set to ubuntu 10.10 ?
ReplyDeleteHow do I do? I do not find the deb-package for ubuntu 10.10.
Help,please!
@Anonymous,
ReplyDeleteGo to the below link and download the ".deb" package and try installing it using that.
http://repository.mein-neues-blog.de:9000/latest/tragtor.deb
After you install it, you'd still have to install Ffmpeg and id3v2 using the above commands which should work in Ubuntu 10.10 I suppose.
Possible Bug. Version 0.8.53 does not create command line output. After all the settings, the confirmation dialog always gives empty window for commandline. Previous releases used to worked great.
ReplyDelete----------------------
Open SuSE 11.4 x64 ffmpeg 0.10.xxx
@Anonymous,
ReplyDeleteHmm, it could be. Thanks for pointing it out though :).