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  2. FFmpeg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FFmpeg

    FFmpeg is a free and open-source software project consisting of a suite of libraries and programs for handling video, audio, and other multimedia files and streams. At its core is the command-line ffmpeg tool itself, designed for processing video and audio files.

  3. mpv (media player) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mpv_(media_player)

    Its goal is to reproduce and ultimately improve upon the functionality of Media Player Classic Home Cinema (mpc-hc), a Windows-only program, as a cross-platform mpv-based multimedia player that also works on Unix-like operating systems like Linux. mpv.net - Windows media player with native Windows interface. Its goal is to provide the standard ...

  4. K-Lite Codec Pack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K-Lite_Codec_Pack

    The last version that is compatible with Windows 2000 is version 7.10. The last version that is compatible with Windows 9x is version 3.45. Starting with K-Lite version 10.0.0, 64-bit codecs were integrated into the regular K-Lite Codec Pack. Previously, a separate 64-bit edition of the pack was available for x64 editions of Windows. [10]

  5. MPlayer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MPlayer

    MPlayer can play a wide variety of media formats, [11] namely any format supported by FFmpeg libraries, and can also save all streamed content to a file locally. A companion program, called MEncoder , can take an input stream, file or a sequence of picture files, and transcode it into several different output formats, optionally applying ...

  6. Video file format - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_file_format

    That is the case with some video file formats, such as WebM (.webm), Windows Media Video (.wmv), Flash Video (.flv), and Ogg Video (.ogv), each of which can only contain a few well-defined subtypes of video and audio coding formats, making it relatively easy to know which codec will play the file.

  7. ShareX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ShareX

    It can also record animated GIF files and video using FFmpeg. An included image editor lets users annotate captured screenshots, or modify them with borders, image effects, watermarks, etc. It is also possible to use the editor to draw on top of the windows or desktop before taking the screenshot.

  8. ffdshow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ffdshow

    The first versions of ffdshow were published in May 2002, as an alternative to the DivX ;-) 3.11 and DivX 5.02 (which came bundled with Gator [6]) decoders of the time, and as a way to combine the speed and quality of MPlayer with popular Windows video players. It continues to support more formats, new and old, as FFmpeg developers add support ...

  9. DVD Flick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVD_Flick

    DVD Flick is an open source DVD authoring application for Windows developed by Dennis Meuwissen and released under the GNU General Public License. DVD Flick is capable of importing audio tracks, video files and subtitles, composing a DVD-Video movie and burning it to a disc – or creating an ISO image for later burning. [2]