
There's a fully functional 30 day trial version for download.

AVIDEMUX WINDOWS 7 64 BIT MP4
You can be confident that the trimmed/joined mp4 files will play without any problems. TMPGEnc MPEG Smart Renderer 5 - The De Facto Standard in Video Cutting Tools () It will soon be installed on the main editing machine for ongoing daily use.įor a paid standalone software, I'd recommend Pegasys (TMPGenc) Smart Renderer:

AVIDEMUX WINDOWS 7 64 BIT PRO
It's absolutely beautiful to use (give or take the lack of JKL functionality for scrubbing, but I'm not complaining) and the finished files work correctly with Premiere Pro CS6. So I've tested the Avidremux in a virtual machine running Win 10 as to not potentially bollox my Win 7 editing setup, and I'm incredibly impressed with just how well this software performs. My issue is that what they wanted was well in excess of what needed their software to do. I wasn't quite thrilled with the interface, but it did the job and I'm not adverse to paying for software either. There is another programme called "VideoReDo TVSuite V5" which I had been evaluating which will also handle files with mp4 video internal to them. There was a program called "TS-EDIT" that was able to do the trimming and cutting without re-encoding to the new file (most important) but this was only useful for files that had the mpeg2 codec internally, and not the newer mp4 codec that is beginning to be used in the HD broadcasts in Australia. Thus, these files were also as good as it gets for digital TV archives. at the same quality that it was broadcast at.

The good thing about these recorders is that they essentially grabbed the data stream from digital TV transmission and stored it as a file on the HDD, Also, internally it was mpeg2 and thus could be placed directly on the editing timeline. The previous P2 model did, and was wonderful, though it had a serious bottleneck with the speed of file transfer via ethernet off the unit. I've recently upgraded / bought a new digital TV recorder unit for digital TV here in Australia (Beyonwiz T4 () for those who are wondering) and discovered that it didn't have the ability to trim out the bits that you want from a recording. Once again it's word of mouth on this forum that has led me to another cool bit of open source software.
