MEncoder

„MEncoder is a free command line video decoding, encoding and filtering tool released under the GNU General Public License. It is a close sibling to MPlayer and can convert all the formats that MPlayer understands into a variety of compressed and uncompressed formats using different codecs.“

MEncoder. (2008, February 23). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 18:57, April 5, 2008, from
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=MEncoder&oldid=193447614


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Sunday, April 6, 2008

Re: [MEncoder-users] mp4 audio slipping when played back in Quicktime

Bram wrote:
> The thing I'm worried about there, is that perhaps ffmpeg/mplayer/faac
> do not accept the same input video formats. Or parse them differently.
> In my case, I don't have control over the input video, and therefore I
> may (and do!) receive the weirdest formats. So far, it seems mencoder
> 'wins' in understanding most formats, though it does need more hinting
> (e.g. supplying specific demuxers on the cmdline for specific video
> formats, etc). So it would be nice if just 1 tool demuxes and/or decodes
> all the video files.
>
> I actually hope I'm wrong in thinking that mencoder understands more
> video formats than, say, ffmpeg. Since in my experience, ffmpeg
> auto-analyzes the input videos better. But as I understand mencoder
> should be able to handle input videos that *require* a windows dll for
> decoding, whereas ffmpeg does not have that option. So mencoder by
> definition is better suited. Or am I wrong here, and can all codecs that
> mencoder understands be decoded by ffmpeg as well?

If transcoding "weird" codecs is a requirement for you, then mencoder
probably is your best bet.

I only transcode DVD (mpeg2video+ac3 in ps) and DVB (mpeg2video+mp2 in
ts), that's all. All of mplayer, mencoder and ffmpeg handle these well.

It's only the subtitling that is a problem :-/

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