MediaCoder uses various open-source (and several proprietary) audio and video codecs to transcode media files to different audio/video formats.[3] Common uses for the program include compression, file type conversion, remuxing and extraction of audio from video files. Many formats are supported, including MP3, Vorbis, Advanced Audio Coding (AAC), Windows Media Audio (WMA), RealAudio, WAV, and others.[4] The program uses a wizard to create files, but that can also be adjusted manually by the drag-and-drop function.[5]
Prior to 2008, MediaCoder was a free and open-source software application and was available on SourceForge.[7] In December 2009, Stanley Huang announced that the project is no longer hosted on SourceForge and no longer open-source.[8]
MediaCoder is always getting better. Before the GUI is completely re-written as an Electron app, a new minor update release is out. Since 64-bit system is already dominating for a while and the fact that more and more encoders are optimized for 64-bit systems, soon we will no longer maintain and release the 32-bit version of MediaCoder. Probably this is the last 32-bit release. Farewell, x86!
Formerly in MediaCoder, 10bpp video content are down scaled to 8bpp for processing. The native 10-bit pixel depth support is ideal for transcoding 10bpp content to 10bpp output. Currently only x264 and NVENC support 10bpp input. When encoding 10bpp H.264, make sure to choose correct profile on x264 tab.
MediaCoder 0.8.46 is released, with support for NVENC 7.0 and Intel MSDK 2016. Try some ultrafast H.264 and HEVC encoding with your cutting-edge GPU! Make sure to update your graphic driver to latest.
Those that need to really turn the screw on control of end quality and size you'll need to really dig deep in the more (very) advanced levers available in the encoding process: things like the Profile, Level and Predictor Frames are just some of the things you need to tweak to really squeeze the most from your encoding.
Download Mediacoder, an open sourced GUI tool that allows you to transcode your videos to H.264 (ready for Brightcove upload) free of charge (they have a command line tool for a cost if you like it enough).
Audio Tab
Select what makes the most sense for you - remember that audio takes up space and the majority of your audio will be consumed and LIMITED by the quality of PC like speakers so don't feel you need to up much here.
And the best bit? This file is ready for upload for immediate play back by any Brightcove player as well as it's ready for playback (thanks to the Baseline setting) on the iPhone - with a size that fits!
MediaCoder is a free and all-in-one media converter tool for audio and video files. The application includes code from many different open-source projects making it competent and comprehensive.The MediaCoder interface provides an easy way to convert between audio and video formats. Converting files is quick whether they be simple audio files like MP3, OGG, AAC, RealAudio or common or uncommon video formats like MPEG1/2, MOV, WMV.MediaCoder can be used to reduce file sizes, improve quality and make files compatible with other players or devices.The application provides a "Device Mode" which includes presets for many common portable devices for quick conversions. Customizations of output formats include codec, bitrate and lots more.Overall, MediaCoder provides a stable and easy way to convert audio and video files with many configuration options. It seems to have been designed for users who own portable devices like cell phone, portable gaming devices, pocket PCs or music players.Features of MediaCoder
MediaCoder is a FREE universal audio/video batch transcoder distributed under GPL license, which puts together lots of excellent audio/video codecs and tools from the open source community into an all-in-one solution, capable of transcoding among different audio/video formats. With many extra features and a expandable architecture, MediaCoder is more than a GUI of a bunch of command line tools.
MediaCoder x64 PRO is a software developed by Team V.R that offers advanced multimedia encoding and transcoding capabilities. It is specifically designed for 64-bit operating systems, providing enhanced performance and efficiency.
I understand you, but in such big update like last time such things can unfortunately happen. To many changes in code and time presser can produce new bugs, this is very well known to devs. and programmers.
I'd agree normally, if it weren't for the fact that this broke between beta and full release of the last update. On top of that it seems the problem has been fixed internally, which makes me wonder why a hot fix cannot be released.
I agree entirely. I purchased the Z11 pro max specifically got the UHD picture which was taken away after the last update in February, which was very disappointing and I would expect to be corrected immediately and not have to wait a month or more for the next update. Not happy
They broke a major feature between a beta release where it worked, to stable where it broke. There was obviously no testing done. It is one thing for beta firmware to break functionality. That's even acceptable. Stable releases breaking features is frustrating.
I understand that programing and coding, it's all very complex and tedious, and one change in one thing can break something somewhere else which seems to be the case here. Yet, shouldn't they have a sense of urgency that a major feature is broken on their most expensive device and it should be a priority to fix? Revert the change made between beta and stable, test, push a hot fix rather than wait for a full release. Push it as a beta so people understand that it might break things because it's a test.
This is my first formuler device. Everyone assured me that I asked that formuler is fantastic. Yet, from the minute I turned this device on and was met with what looked like a factory test screen instead of a normal boot up with no documentation anywhere to fix it (I figured it out on my own) and then experiencing the half baked MOL3, I've had doubts. I want Formuler to have a sense of urgency because these experiences are leaving me unimpressed.
for example the same dev team may not be assign to the different series boxes or the company may cut cost by hiring cheaper devs for a future box series or they may just decide to try something new that may fail or rocket off.
All of these multimedia audio and video technology are available in a simple user interface that allows you to manipulate your multimedia files in a dozen ways. The most significant advantage is that MediaCoder has been developed for over 15 years, and new features and latest codec updates are regularly added or updated. It is indeed a swiss army knife when it comes down to media transcoding.
Note: FossHub offers the free editions of MediaCoder. There is also a premium version. Also, there are multiple editions such as the Handsets Edition (for mobile phones), Web Video Edition (for high-quality web production), PSP Edition (for Sony PSP), iPhone/iPod/iPad Edition (for all series of Apple products), you can find all of them listed on the Edition page here.
The Windows Media Audio and Video codecs are a collection of objects that you can use to compress and decompress digital media data. Each codec consists of two objects, an encoder and a decoder. This part of the documentation describes how to use the features of the Windows Media Audio and Video codecs to produce and consume compressed data streams.
7fc3f7cf58