![]() ![]() Let’s move on…ĭon’t worry, I’m not even half way through my list of the video conversion software I have on my hard drive. Unless you like a white screen better than a black screen. There hasn’t been a new release for over three years, but it still works wonders on changing videos from one format to another. That’s enough fun with Apple’s offerings… on to the more powerful Swiss Army knife of transcoding video MPEG StreamClip. (You’ve let me down again, QuickTime Player!) QuickTime Player 7 opens the file, but there’s nothing there… at least nothing it can decode properly. The “Tell me more” button takes you to a page explaining that QuickTime Player 10 sucks, and you should try QuickTime Player 7. The first attempt was to open it using Apple’s QuickTime Player 10. Since I’m using Mac OS X in 2016 and AVI was introduced by Microsoft in November 1992, I had some problems. If you don’t know much about AVI, it’s a ‘container format’, which means it could use any of a long list of encoding schemes, and you may have problems reading the file. It saves a digital file to an Micro SD card. You just plug in some RCA cables coming from your VCR or old analog video camera, and press the “record” button on the device. (The device is a Werecord BR120 Video & Audio Grabber Box from Digit!Now) Knowing that the specs on such things are usually not very specific, but that I’d find a way to make it work, I told him to order it. During the holidays my uncle asked me about converting old VHS video tapes to digital versions, and he showed me a converter he had found.
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