Hi Phil,

I use QuickTime or VLC to convert movies to web-compatible formats. VLC may 
also work from the command line. I have also used ffmpeg but this is 
ridiculously complicated. Usually, if the goal is to embed a movie on a 
website, I just upload it to Vimeo and embed the Vimeo movie on the website.

There are gazillions of GUI's for ffmpeg already. You could try to do better 
than your predecessor. If you succeed, then it'll be very rewarding.

--
Best regards,

Mark Schonewille

Economy-x-Talk Consulting and Software Engineering
Homepage: http://economy-x-talk.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/xtalkprogrammer
KvK: 50277553

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On 11 nov 2011, at 19:35, Phil Davis wrote:

> Hey People,
> 
> Do you use a command line tool of some sort on your Mac to convert .mov files 
> to web formats? I sure would like to hear about it.
> 
> I'm expecting that I need to end up with several file types as described in 
> this piece of advice from the web:
> 
> Make one version that uses WebM (VP8 + Vorbis).
> Make another version that uses H.264 baseline video and AAC “low complexity” 
> audio in an MP4 container.
> Make another version that uses Theora video and Vorbis audio in an Ogg 
> container.
> 
> Here is the advice source:
> http://diveintohtml5.info/video.html
> 
> Thanks for your input! My goal is to create a LC front end to manage the 
> commandline-driven coversion process.
> -- 
> Phil Davis
> 
> PDS Labs
> Professional Software Development
> http://pdslabs.net


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