On Wed, 30 Oct 2019, 03:40 Mark Filipak, <
markfilipak.windows+ffm...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 10/29/2019 09:15 PM, Mike M wrote:
> > Greetings all from Australia.
> > A new member here.
> >
> > I want to use ffmpeg to clean up PVR files which have frame errors.
> > The are in the format:
Oops. Sent too soon. Had an extra '\'.
What I do, Mike, is simpler. I add the ffmpeg command to the 'Send to'
context menu. To do that, all you need is to put the line
D:\Videos\_APPS\fmpeg-421\bin\ffmpeg.exe -i "%1" -c copy "%1_"
into a batch file, and put the batch file in
On 10/29/2019 09:15 PM, Mike M wrote:
Greetings all from Australia.
A new member here.
I want to use ffmpeg to clean up PVR files which have frame errors.
The are in the format: *NAME.TSV* (mpeg-ts)
The command for ffmpeg is:
*ffmpeg -i "NAME.TSV" -c copy "NAME.TSV_"*
Now, I want to run this
> ... Regedit.
I really have no idea on how registries work, but aren’t they keys and values?
What's
> Something like:
> *D:\\Videos\\_APPS\\ffmpeg-421\\bin\\ffmpeg.exe -i "%1" -c copy "%1_"*
the value for? Also is delimiting the value in asterisks, of all things, the
syntax? I really don’t
Greetings all from Australia.
A new member here.
I want to use ffmpeg to clean up PVR files which have frame errors.
The are in the format: *NAME.TSV* (mpeg-ts)
The command for ffmpeg is:
*ffmpeg -i "NAME.TSV" -c copy "NAME.TSV_"*
Now, I want to run this command when I right-click on a video