Unregistered

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There are many situations in which it is inconvenient to process only one file. For example, if I begin capturing a television show but realize that I need to change a setting or two. The obvious solution is to wait for a commercial, stop capture, make the changes, and then resume capture to a second file. As another example, when recompressing DVDs for use in a CD environment, storage restraints may prevent me from working in disc mode, and therefore I will end up with half a dozen AVI files needing to be merged. I realize Virtual Dub is not designed to be a powerful video editing tool, but in my opinion the ability to capture video, trim, recompress, and merge files is broken.
I'll check out avisynth when I get back from vacation. |