![]() ![]() Then, instead of the file you wanted, you get a totally corrupted download that you cannot use. There's a joke: Linux is user friendly, it's just very picky about who its friends are.Internet Download Manager (IDM) is a download accelerator and file organizer that manages the download of many types of files from the Internet.Has IDM ever not been able to complete a download perfectly? Maybe it's stalled at 98% or a number very close to 100% and stops downloading altogether. No doubt Linux/Unix is the better OS, but only for the geeks.įor security reasons all my online banking is done with a version of macpup that I've reworked to be totally non-persistent.įor shear program variety and support, only windows makes the cut (at a $ price of course!). None of these easy to use attributes (basically GUI aspects!) say anything about the strength - stability - flexibility - safety etc of the underlying OS. Running a program is easy on windows, just one click to create a shortcut to it on the desktop. Installing a program is a single, all inclusive step on windows - not so with the different distributions approach of Linux.įinding a program is simple on windows, its found in the installation folder, and that is easily locatable in a "logically sensible to the average user" linear virtual directory structure. In each of these categories, windows performs these tasks easier and quicker. The average end user of an OS is not interested in anything much deeper than Installing a program, Finding a program and Running a program. Everything else happens as normal.įrom memory I think this 'video too short' has only happened with video that has already been edited and is being re-edited, must keep an eye out for that.īut linux has always had issues in terms of "ease of use" for the average end user. It may seem like a stupid question but of course you are sure you have enough free drive space to receive and process such a large file? (just asking)Įdit: I have just read your first post again and although I have had the approximate message of 'video too short' Avidemux doesn't hang, it simply saves a video that is shorter than intended and I can the ok the warning. It may take a few attempts, choosing different durations for the various parts. This process may need repeated if the second part is also too short and so on until all the parts make up the whole length you want. The next part should start at that I-frame. The first part should end one frame before the last I-frame, of the 'too short' video ends. I have found that cutting the video into 2 or more parts, having made the edits required to each part separately and saved them. The symptoms you give are what I have experienced with mp4 files occasionally. I have encountered this problem occasionally, admittedly not with mpeg files as I have other software that I would use for that. ![]() But it's partly covered in an older thread which happened to be started by me. Regardless of what the "too short" problem is, it's still a bug that AviD does not return to wait-state at all, but stays "operating", i.e., stuck. I can drag it around, but it still says "(not responding)". It still bombs with the error message, "Too short: The video has been saved but seems to be incomplete." And most importantly, the program does not end. AviD would give an error if I opened the old idx. I DO remember in the past that the idx format changed. The instructions for 2.6.14 said to uninstall any prior version which I did. ![]() I didn't have an idx, but as I recall, I had created one under 2.6.8. I did find the config2 there, as well as config3. If not working with 2.6 branch try with 2.5.6 Quote from: Jan Gruuthuse on September 21, 2016, 01:53:37 PMĭelete the config2 file, somewhere in avidemux related user folder. "Upload a sample"? To do that I'd have to use Avidemux to chop it and it's this very process where the bug is that is keeping me from doing this! I'm trying to trim off junk from the start and end, then save the file. Also it's 13 GB, so probably prohibitive to upload. It's the first time I'm using Avidemux with an Mpeg2 file and it's one I captured from live streaming. At 5000 kbit/s 250 MiB should be enough, but please check the total bitrate first. show), it gives the ubiquitous "Too short" message.ĭoes this happen with one particular video or generally with mpeg2 videos? Do ffplay or mplayer play the video without issues? If it is just one video, please upload a sample from the beginning of the file more or less beyond the spot which makes problems to a publicly accessible service like e.g. At a point very early in the show (6 min. I am doing "copy/copy" of Mpeg2 program stream, free format. Quote from: TCmullet on September 21, 2016, 01:23:03 PM ![]()
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