dmg file from December 27, 2020.Open the file you wish to edit in Avidemux using Menu File > Open & then source the video file that you want to start snipping up. There are folders for other MacOS releases but they are all ancient - with /nightly/osx_mojave/ being a small exception. Windows binaries are available at /nightly/win64/ and updated binaries for MacOS Cantalina are available in /nightly/osx_catalina/. There's also an alternative folder for very old GNU/Linux distributions like Debian Buster called /nightly/appImage4Buster/.Īvidemux is available as a Flatpak over at /apps/details/ but it has not yet been updated, you will currently get the older 2.7.6 version if you install it from there. The latest as of today, from 210306, will give you Avidemux 2.7.8. The nightly builds have dates, not version numbers. Usable AppImage binaries that should work on the vast majority of GNU/Linux distributions can be acquired from the /nightly/appImage4/ folder. There are working binary releases available at /nightly/. None of those work, they are either tested on just one GNU/Linux distribution or not at all. There are several bash scripts in there such as bootStrap.bash, makeAppImage.sh, createDebFromSourceUbuntu.bash and createRpmFromSourceFedora.bash. Those source code tarballs do not contain any instructions for compiling the thing, there's not even a hint. Actual releases are now pushed to the projects github releases page where you will only find source code for both version 2.7.7 and the latest 2.7.8 release. The latest release listed there is 2.7.6. The avidemux homepage at /avidemux/ as not been updated since forever. Rate control should work much better in this release. The rate control used to be mostly broken for several video encoders like VP9 and NVENC.Those video codecs haven't been used in decades, but it may be useful if you encounter a strange old MP4 file with MPEG-2 video in it. The MP4 muxer can now handle MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 video.That bundled library is limited to 8 decoding threads for some reason. The ffmpeg library bundled in Windows and Linux AppImage releases is now compiled with support for multi-threading video decoding.The maximum video resolution Avidemux can handle has been increased to 8192x8192.There is a new preferences option that lets you keep the identify of the A and B markers instead of swapping them if you move one beyond the other.XLL substreams in DTS audio tracks can now be copied and/or decoded.Uncompressed 24-bit audio is now supported in a limited number of audio formats.Don't expect it to work with all files and file formats. There's now initial support for 7.1 channel audio.It can not properly handle such files, but this does make it easier to split them with other tools like ffmpeg.
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