So many video file formats, so many handheld video players, so many online video sites, and so little time. To have your favorite clips howyouwant them—whether that‘s on your DVR, iPod, PSP or desktop—you need the right utility to convert ‘em into the format that works for you. Commercial video converter software‘s aplenty, but there are several solid free utilities that can convert your video files on every operating system, or if you‘ve just got a web browser and a quick clip. Put DVDs on your iPod, YouTube videos on DVD, or convert any video file with today‘s top 10 free video rippers, encoders and converters. 10. VLC media player (Open source/All platforms)Ok, so VLC is a media player, not converter, but if you‘re watching digital video, it‘s a must-have—plus VLC can indeed rip DVD‘s, as well as play ripped discsin ISO format (no actual optical media required.) VLC can also play FLV files downloaded from YouTube et al, no conversion to AVI required. Since there‘s a portable version, VLC‘s a nice choice for getting your DVD rips/saved YouTube video watching on wherever you go.9. MediaCoder (Open source/Windows)Batch convert audio and video compression formats with the open source Media Coder for Windows, which works with a long laundry lists of formats, including MP3, Ogg Vorbis, AAC, AAC+, AAC+V2, MusePack, WMA, RealAudio, AVI, MPEG/VOB, Matroska, MP4, RealMedia, ASF/WMV, Quicktime, and OGM, to name a few.8. Avi2Dvd (Freeware/Windows)![]() 7. Videora Converter (Freeware/Windows only)Honorable Mention: Ares Tube for Windows converts YouTube and other online videos to iPod format. 6. Any Video Converter (Freeware/Windows only)Convert almost all video formats including DivX, XviD, MOV, rm, rmvb, MPEG, VOB, DVD, WMV, AVI to MPEG-4 movie format for iPod/PSP or other portable video device, MP4 player or smart phone with Any Video Converter, which also supports user-defined video file formats as the output. Batch process multiple files that AVC saves to a pre-selected directory folder, leaving the original files untouched.5. Hey!Watch (webapp)Web application Hey!Watch converts videolocated on your computer desktop as well as clips hosted on video sites. Upload your video to Hey!Watch to encode it into a wide variety of file formats, like H264, MP4, WMV, DivX, HD Video, Mobile 3GP/MP4, iPod, Archos and PSP. Hey!Watch only allows for 10MB of video uploads per month for free, and from there you pay for what you use, but it‘s got lots of neat features for video publishers like podcast feed generation and automatic batch processing with options you set once.4. VidDownloader (webapp)When you don‘t want to mess with installing software to grab that priceless YouTube clip before it gets yanked, head over to web site VidDownloaderwhich sucks in videos from all the big streaming sites (YouTube, Google Video, iFilm, Blip.TV, DailyMotion, etc.), converts ‘em for you to a playable format and offers them for download. Other downloaders for online video sites buy you a Flash FLV file, but VidDownloader spits back an AVI file.3. iSquint (Freeware/Mac OS X only)Convert any video file to iPod-sized versions and automatically add the results to your iTunes library. iSquint is free, but Lifehacker readers have praised the pay-for iSquint upgrade, VisualHub, which offers more advanced options for a $23 license fee. Check out the feature comparison chart between iSquint and VisualHub.2. DVD Shrink (Freeware/Windows only)![]() Honorable mention: DVD Decrypter (beware of advertisement interstitial page), which Windows peeps can use to copy DVDs to their iPods. 1. Handbrake (Open source/Windows, Mac)Back up your DVD‘s to digital file with this open source DVD to MPEG-4 converter app. See also how to rip DVDs to your iPod with Handbrake. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- It seems you‘re focusing on "one click" solutions which work fine when they work, but if you need more control or have a problematic vid, the combination of Virtual Dub[1], AviSynth[2] and DGMPGDec[3] along with the right set of codecs and an MPG 1/2 Encoder like CCE[4] or MainConcept[5] are hard to beat. Throw in a DVD ripper like DVDFab Decrypter[6] and a handful of other utilities like MeGUI[7] and your toolbox will be ready for anything you throw at it. [1] [www.][2] [] i‘ve been using DVD Shrink since it was made available. i love it. |
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