From the article:

FFmpeg is a tool almost every Linux user has benefited from, even if they have never typed its name in a terminal. It powers countless media workflows, handling video, audio, image, subtitle, and metadata processing with great flexibility.

The problem is that using it directly usually means dealing with long commands, codec names, bitrate settings, filters, containers, and much trial and error. Frame tries to make that part less painful.

It is an open-source desktop application providing a graphical interface for FFmpeg. Instead of replacing FFmpeg, it wraps it in a native app and offers users a cleaner way to configure common media conversion tasks. The project describes itself as a native media conversion utility built in Rust, using FFmpeg and FFprobe underneath for media handling.

  • qupada@fedia.io
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    2 days ago

    I’ve done some truly horrible things with it.

    Whenever we have big construction projects at work, I export footage from our CCTV system and time-lapse it.

    But then one time I wanted to put two videos side by side. Difficulty that they were both variable frame rate (a quirk of the NVR, but meant that played at constant rate they wouldn’t line up).

    It ended up with 5 copies of ffmpeg running at once. Because the most efficient way to create this monstrosity was 2 copies that stretched their input videos to 25fps (by duplicating frames), piped into two that ran the time lapsing, and both outputs into a 5th that assembled the video into one frame and encoded it.

    I think you’d struggle to represent that level of kerfuckery in a GUI, to be honest.