How can I convert an ogv file to mp4?
I created a screencast using recordmydesktop which produed a .ogv file. I believe this is an OGG file encoded using the Theora codec. I'm wondering, how can I convert this to MPEG4/H.264? I've tried to use ffmpeg in a naive way, as follows:
ffmpeg -i demo.ogv -f mp4 demo.mp4
However, this produces an evil blob of dark greens and grays when trying to play it again in mplayer. I then tried to get more sophisticated, using the command-line flags specified here: Converting a video file in arbitrary file format into MPEG4/H.264?
ffmpeg -i demo.ogv
-s 352x288 -vcodec libx264 -vpre default
-acodec libmp3lame -ab 192k -ac 2 -ar 44100 -f mp4
demo.mp4
But, the result was the same.
If anyone has any insight into what might be the best way to accomplish this task, I'd appreciate it if you could let me know.
ffmpeg codecs
add a comment |
I created a screencast using recordmydesktop which produed a .ogv file. I believe this is an OGG file encoded using the Theora codec. I'm wondering, how can I convert this to MPEG4/H.264? I've tried to use ffmpeg in a naive way, as follows:
ffmpeg -i demo.ogv -f mp4 demo.mp4
However, this produces an evil blob of dark greens and grays when trying to play it again in mplayer. I then tried to get more sophisticated, using the command-line flags specified here: Converting a video file in arbitrary file format into MPEG4/H.264?
ffmpeg -i demo.ogv
-s 352x288 -vcodec libx264 -vpre default
-acodec libmp3lame -ab 192k -ac 2 -ar 44100 -f mp4
demo.mp4
But, the result was the same.
If anyone has any insight into what might be the best way to accomplish this task, I'd appreciate it if you could let me know.
ffmpeg codecs
Here's a tutorial how to compile ffmpeg x264: ffmpeg.org/trac/ffmpeg/wiki/UbuntuCompilationGuide
– Enissay
Oct 27 '12 at 2:01
Just want to mention that I successfully uploaded an ogv video to Youtube. I guess one could follow that path and then use an online Youtube to mp4 converter.
– Eyal Levin
Feb 19 '14 at 13:53
add a comment |
I created a screencast using recordmydesktop which produed a .ogv file. I believe this is an OGG file encoded using the Theora codec. I'm wondering, how can I convert this to MPEG4/H.264? I've tried to use ffmpeg in a naive way, as follows:
ffmpeg -i demo.ogv -f mp4 demo.mp4
However, this produces an evil blob of dark greens and grays when trying to play it again in mplayer. I then tried to get more sophisticated, using the command-line flags specified here: Converting a video file in arbitrary file format into MPEG4/H.264?
ffmpeg -i demo.ogv
-s 352x288 -vcodec libx264 -vpre default
-acodec libmp3lame -ab 192k -ac 2 -ar 44100 -f mp4
demo.mp4
But, the result was the same.
If anyone has any insight into what might be the best way to accomplish this task, I'd appreciate it if you could let me know.
ffmpeg codecs
I created a screencast using recordmydesktop which produed a .ogv file. I believe this is an OGG file encoded using the Theora codec. I'm wondering, how can I convert this to MPEG4/H.264? I've tried to use ffmpeg in a naive way, as follows:
ffmpeg -i demo.ogv -f mp4 demo.mp4
However, this produces an evil blob of dark greens and grays when trying to play it again in mplayer. I then tried to get more sophisticated, using the command-line flags specified here: Converting a video file in arbitrary file format into MPEG4/H.264?
ffmpeg -i demo.ogv
-s 352x288 -vcodec libx264 -vpre default
-acodec libmp3lame -ab 192k -ac 2 -ar 44100 -f mp4
demo.mp4
But, the result was the same.
If anyone has any insight into what might be the best way to accomplish this task, I'd appreciate it if you could let me know.
ffmpeg codecs
ffmpeg codecs
edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:24
Community♦
1
1
asked Nov 8 '10 at 21:45
jbeard4jbeard4
5612918
5612918
Here's a tutorial how to compile ffmpeg x264: ffmpeg.org/trac/ffmpeg/wiki/UbuntuCompilationGuide
– Enissay
Oct 27 '12 at 2:01
Just want to mention that I successfully uploaded an ogv video to Youtube. I guess one could follow that path and then use an online Youtube to mp4 converter.
– Eyal Levin
Feb 19 '14 at 13:53
add a comment |
Here's a tutorial how to compile ffmpeg x264: ffmpeg.org/trac/ffmpeg/wiki/UbuntuCompilationGuide
– Enissay
Oct 27 '12 at 2:01
Just want to mention that I successfully uploaded an ogv video to Youtube. I guess one could follow that path and then use an online Youtube to mp4 converter.
– Eyal Levin
Feb 19 '14 at 13:53
Here's a tutorial how to compile ffmpeg x264: ffmpeg.org/trac/ffmpeg/wiki/UbuntuCompilationGuide
– Enissay
Oct 27 '12 at 2:01
Here's a tutorial how to compile ffmpeg x264: ffmpeg.org/trac/ffmpeg/wiki/UbuntuCompilationGuide
– Enissay
Oct 27 '12 at 2:01
Just want to mention that I successfully uploaded an ogv video to Youtube. I guess one could follow that path and then use an online Youtube to mp4 converter.
– Eyal Levin
Feb 19 '14 at 13:53
Just want to mention that I successfully uploaded an ogv video to Youtube. I guess one could follow that path and then use an online Youtube to mp4 converter.
– Eyal Levin
Feb 19 '14 at 13:53
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
Arista Transcoder
or from command line
sudo apt-get install arista -y
You can use this software, that I always use and I think it's really good. To convert an ogv file to mp4 you should choose any Sony device.
1
This totally did the trick.
– jbeard4
Nov 9 '10 at 1:58
maybe also mention the Nautilus plugin?
– Tshepang
Nov 9 '10 at 23:03
@Tshepang, I've never used the Nautilus plugin. How is it called? I want to try it now!
– DrKenobi
Nov 10 '10 at 0:42
1
@Tshepang, I can't try it now :( I'm using 10.04 LTS and the plugin is available for 10.10 and 11.04. I'll have to wait for my new laptop to try it. Thanks for the info!
– DrKenobi
Nov 10 '10 at 2:51
1
Looks like Arista is no longer available in the repositories :(
– jrg♦
Oct 23 '17 at 15:12
|
show 3 more comments
This is an older question now but a modern FFmpeg (under Xenial Xerus and releases following this) would convert an ogv file in the following manner:
ffmpeg -i input.ogv
-c:v libx264 -preset veryslow -crf 22
-c:a libmp3lame -qscale:a 2 -ac 2 -ar 44100
output.mp4
and this should create an excellent file.
Extra Tweaks:
Some tweaks to these settings are more than possible. Here are some suggestions:
- If you wanted a set bitrate for the mp3 sound you would change the setting
-qscale:a 2
to the setting-b:a 196k
. (Use a higher or lower value for bitrate as you wish.) - If you wanted to get a better quality video output decrease the crf setting to something like:
-crf 18
. Bear in mind that file size increases as the quality setting is lowered.
Sometimes players such as WMP and Quicktime have trouble with mp3 audio in an mp4 container and in these cases it is sensible to use AAC sound instead:
ffmpeg -i input.ogv
-c:v libx264 -preset veryslow -crf 22
-c:a aac -b:a 160k -strict -2
output.mp4
Newer versions of FFmpeg (i.e. released after December 5th 2015) will not need the
-strict -2
option but it is still needed for Xenial Xerus...
On Ubuntu 14.04 this command fails with the error message:Invalid encoder type 'libmp3lame'
.
– Luís de Sousa
Apr 28 '15 at 18:38
1
For 14.04 try installinglibavcodec-extra-54
and this should fix the issue... If compiling you will need the -dev file for lame:libmp3lame-dev
.
– andrew.46
May 1 '15 at 21:57
Some players, such as WMP and QuickTime, have trouble decoding some MP4 files that use MP3 audio (for WMP it depends on audio sample rate).
– llogan
Aug 5 '16 at 16:55
@LordNeckbeard Thanks for the tip, I have updated the answer, feel free to correct anything in it :)
– andrew.46
Aug 5 '16 at 22:08
add a comment |
FF Multi Converter is another great choice, not only for successful .ogv
to .mp4
conversation. Simple, user-friendly and elegant interface, gives a complete log of conversion details, supports a huge list of formats (see below), gets the job done quickly.
Audio/Video formats:
aac, ac3, afc, aiff, amr, asf, au, avi, dvd, flac, flv, mka, mkv, mmf, mov, mp3, mp4, mpg, ogg, ogv, psp, rm, spx, vob, wav, webm, wma, wmv
And any other format supported by ffmpeg.
Image formats:
bmp, cgm, dpx, emf, eps, fpx, gif, jbig, jng, jpeg, mrsid, p7, pdf, picon, png, ppm, psd, rad, tga, tif, webp, xpm
And any other format supported by ImageMagick.
Document file formats:
doc -> odt, pdf
html -> odt
odp -> pdf, ppt
ods -> pdf
odt -> doc, html, pdf, rtf, sxw, txt, xml
ppt -> odp
rtf -> odt
sdw -> odt
sxw -> odt
txt -> odt
xls -> ods
xml -> doc, odt, pdf
Installing on Ubuntu - [Stable release]
To add the ppa to your system resources and install ffmulticonverter, open a terminal and type:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ffmulticonverter/stable
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install ffmulticonverter
By default ffmulticonverter will bring all of its optional dependencies (ffmpeg, pythonmagick, unoconv) as well.
If you wish, you can install ffmulticonverter alone and then install only the optional dependencies you like manually:
sudo apt-get install --no-install-recommends ffmulticonverter
Then you can install the rest of the dependencies separately, depending on what you want to convert:
If you wish to convert videos, install ffmpeg: sudo apt-get install ffmpeg
If you wish to convert documents, install unoconv: sudo apt-get install unoconv
If you wish to convert images, install python imagemagick: sudo apt-get install python-pythonmagick
1
This was an excellent program, with up to date version in RPM Fusion repo.
– hlovdal
May 9 '17 at 20:14
add a comment |
protected by Community♦ Apr 18 '14 at 12:55
Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Arista Transcoder
or from command line
sudo apt-get install arista -y
You can use this software, that I always use and I think it's really good. To convert an ogv file to mp4 you should choose any Sony device.
1
This totally did the trick.
– jbeard4
Nov 9 '10 at 1:58
maybe also mention the Nautilus plugin?
– Tshepang
Nov 9 '10 at 23:03
@Tshepang, I've never used the Nautilus plugin. How is it called? I want to try it now!
– DrKenobi
Nov 10 '10 at 0:42
1
@Tshepang, I can't try it now :( I'm using 10.04 LTS and the plugin is available for 10.10 and 11.04. I'll have to wait for my new laptop to try it. Thanks for the info!
– DrKenobi
Nov 10 '10 at 2:51
1
Looks like Arista is no longer available in the repositories :(
– jrg♦
Oct 23 '17 at 15:12
|
show 3 more comments
Arista Transcoder
or from command line
sudo apt-get install arista -y
You can use this software, that I always use and I think it's really good. To convert an ogv file to mp4 you should choose any Sony device.
1
This totally did the trick.
– jbeard4
Nov 9 '10 at 1:58
maybe also mention the Nautilus plugin?
– Tshepang
Nov 9 '10 at 23:03
@Tshepang, I've never used the Nautilus plugin. How is it called? I want to try it now!
– DrKenobi
Nov 10 '10 at 0:42
1
@Tshepang, I can't try it now :( I'm using 10.04 LTS and the plugin is available for 10.10 and 11.04. I'll have to wait for my new laptop to try it. Thanks for the info!
– DrKenobi
Nov 10 '10 at 2:51
1
Looks like Arista is no longer available in the repositories :(
– jrg♦
Oct 23 '17 at 15:12
|
show 3 more comments
Arista Transcoder
or from command line
sudo apt-get install arista -y
You can use this software, that I always use and I think it's really good. To convert an ogv file to mp4 you should choose any Sony device.
Arista Transcoder
or from command line
sudo apt-get install arista -y
You can use this software, that I always use and I think it's really good. To convert an ogv file to mp4 you should choose any Sony device.
edited May 15 '17 at 18:16
Anwar
57k22148255
57k22148255
answered Nov 8 '10 at 21:53
DrKenobiDrKenobi
4,75732025
4,75732025
1
This totally did the trick.
– jbeard4
Nov 9 '10 at 1:58
maybe also mention the Nautilus plugin?
– Tshepang
Nov 9 '10 at 23:03
@Tshepang, I've never used the Nautilus plugin. How is it called? I want to try it now!
– DrKenobi
Nov 10 '10 at 0:42
1
@Tshepang, I can't try it now :( I'm using 10.04 LTS and the plugin is available for 10.10 and 11.04. I'll have to wait for my new laptop to try it. Thanks for the info!
– DrKenobi
Nov 10 '10 at 2:51
1
Looks like Arista is no longer available in the repositories :(
– jrg♦
Oct 23 '17 at 15:12
|
show 3 more comments
1
This totally did the trick.
– jbeard4
Nov 9 '10 at 1:58
maybe also mention the Nautilus plugin?
– Tshepang
Nov 9 '10 at 23:03
@Tshepang, I've never used the Nautilus plugin. How is it called? I want to try it now!
– DrKenobi
Nov 10 '10 at 0:42
1
@Tshepang, I can't try it now :( I'm using 10.04 LTS and the plugin is available for 10.10 and 11.04. I'll have to wait for my new laptop to try it. Thanks for the info!
– DrKenobi
Nov 10 '10 at 2:51
1
Looks like Arista is no longer available in the repositories :(
– jrg♦
Oct 23 '17 at 15:12
1
1
This totally did the trick.
– jbeard4
Nov 9 '10 at 1:58
This totally did the trick.
– jbeard4
Nov 9 '10 at 1:58
maybe also mention the Nautilus plugin?
– Tshepang
Nov 9 '10 at 23:03
maybe also mention the Nautilus plugin?
– Tshepang
Nov 9 '10 at 23:03
@Tshepang, I've never used the Nautilus plugin. How is it called? I want to try it now!
– DrKenobi
Nov 10 '10 at 0:42
@Tshepang, I've never used the Nautilus plugin. How is it called? I want to try it now!
– DrKenobi
Nov 10 '10 at 0:42
1
1
@Tshepang, I can't try it now :( I'm using 10.04 LTS and the plugin is available for 10.10 and 11.04. I'll have to wait for my new laptop to try it. Thanks for the info!
– DrKenobi
Nov 10 '10 at 2:51
@Tshepang, I can't try it now :( I'm using 10.04 LTS and the plugin is available for 10.10 and 11.04. I'll have to wait for my new laptop to try it. Thanks for the info!
– DrKenobi
Nov 10 '10 at 2:51
1
1
Looks like Arista is no longer available in the repositories :(
– jrg♦
Oct 23 '17 at 15:12
Looks like Arista is no longer available in the repositories :(
– jrg♦
Oct 23 '17 at 15:12
|
show 3 more comments
This is an older question now but a modern FFmpeg (under Xenial Xerus and releases following this) would convert an ogv file in the following manner:
ffmpeg -i input.ogv
-c:v libx264 -preset veryslow -crf 22
-c:a libmp3lame -qscale:a 2 -ac 2 -ar 44100
output.mp4
and this should create an excellent file.
Extra Tweaks:
Some tweaks to these settings are more than possible. Here are some suggestions:
- If you wanted a set bitrate for the mp3 sound you would change the setting
-qscale:a 2
to the setting-b:a 196k
. (Use a higher or lower value for bitrate as you wish.) - If you wanted to get a better quality video output decrease the crf setting to something like:
-crf 18
. Bear in mind that file size increases as the quality setting is lowered.
Sometimes players such as WMP and Quicktime have trouble with mp3 audio in an mp4 container and in these cases it is sensible to use AAC sound instead:
ffmpeg -i input.ogv
-c:v libx264 -preset veryslow -crf 22
-c:a aac -b:a 160k -strict -2
output.mp4
Newer versions of FFmpeg (i.e. released after December 5th 2015) will not need the
-strict -2
option but it is still needed for Xenial Xerus...
On Ubuntu 14.04 this command fails with the error message:Invalid encoder type 'libmp3lame'
.
– Luís de Sousa
Apr 28 '15 at 18:38
1
For 14.04 try installinglibavcodec-extra-54
and this should fix the issue... If compiling you will need the -dev file for lame:libmp3lame-dev
.
– andrew.46
May 1 '15 at 21:57
Some players, such as WMP and QuickTime, have trouble decoding some MP4 files that use MP3 audio (for WMP it depends on audio sample rate).
– llogan
Aug 5 '16 at 16:55
@LordNeckbeard Thanks for the tip, I have updated the answer, feel free to correct anything in it :)
– andrew.46
Aug 5 '16 at 22:08
add a comment |
This is an older question now but a modern FFmpeg (under Xenial Xerus and releases following this) would convert an ogv file in the following manner:
ffmpeg -i input.ogv
-c:v libx264 -preset veryslow -crf 22
-c:a libmp3lame -qscale:a 2 -ac 2 -ar 44100
output.mp4
and this should create an excellent file.
Extra Tweaks:
Some tweaks to these settings are more than possible. Here are some suggestions:
- If you wanted a set bitrate for the mp3 sound you would change the setting
-qscale:a 2
to the setting-b:a 196k
. (Use a higher or lower value for bitrate as you wish.) - If you wanted to get a better quality video output decrease the crf setting to something like:
-crf 18
. Bear in mind that file size increases as the quality setting is lowered.
Sometimes players such as WMP and Quicktime have trouble with mp3 audio in an mp4 container and in these cases it is sensible to use AAC sound instead:
ffmpeg -i input.ogv
-c:v libx264 -preset veryslow -crf 22
-c:a aac -b:a 160k -strict -2
output.mp4
Newer versions of FFmpeg (i.e. released after December 5th 2015) will not need the
-strict -2
option but it is still needed for Xenial Xerus...
On Ubuntu 14.04 this command fails with the error message:Invalid encoder type 'libmp3lame'
.
– Luís de Sousa
Apr 28 '15 at 18:38
1
For 14.04 try installinglibavcodec-extra-54
and this should fix the issue... If compiling you will need the -dev file for lame:libmp3lame-dev
.
– andrew.46
May 1 '15 at 21:57
Some players, such as WMP and QuickTime, have trouble decoding some MP4 files that use MP3 audio (for WMP it depends on audio sample rate).
– llogan
Aug 5 '16 at 16:55
@LordNeckbeard Thanks for the tip, I have updated the answer, feel free to correct anything in it :)
– andrew.46
Aug 5 '16 at 22:08
add a comment |
This is an older question now but a modern FFmpeg (under Xenial Xerus and releases following this) would convert an ogv file in the following manner:
ffmpeg -i input.ogv
-c:v libx264 -preset veryslow -crf 22
-c:a libmp3lame -qscale:a 2 -ac 2 -ar 44100
output.mp4
and this should create an excellent file.
Extra Tweaks:
Some tweaks to these settings are more than possible. Here are some suggestions:
- If you wanted a set bitrate for the mp3 sound you would change the setting
-qscale:a 2
to the setting-b:a 196k
. (Use a higher or lower value for bitrate as you wish.) - If you wanted to get a better quality video output decrease the crf setting to something like:
-crf 18
. Bear in mind that file size increases as the quality setting is lowered.
Sometimes players such as WMP and Quicktime have trouble with mp3 audio in an mp4 container and in these cases it is sensible to use AAC sound instead:
ffmpeg -i input.ogv
-c:v libx264 -preset veryslow -crf 22
-c:a aac -b:a 160k -strict -2
output.mp4
Newer versions of FFmpeg (i.e. released after December 5th 2015) will not need the
-strict -2
option but it is still needed for Xenial Xerus...
This is an older question now but a modern FFmpeg (under Xenial Xerus and releases following this) would convert an ogv file in the following manner:
ffmpeg -i input.ogv
-c:v libx264 -preset veryslow -crf 22
-c:a libmp3lame -qscale:a 2 -ac 2 -ar 44100
output.mp4
and this should create an excellent file.
Extra Tweaks:
Some tweaks to these settings are more than possible. Here are some suggestions:
- If you wanted a set bitrate for the mp3 sound you would change the setting
-qscale:a 2
to the setting-b:a 196k
. (Use a higher or lower value for bitrate as you wish.) - If you wanted to get a better quality video output decrease the crf setting to something like:
-crf 18
. Bear in mind that file size increases as the quality setting is lowered.
Sometimes players such as WMP and Quicktime have trouble with mp3 audio in an mp4 container and in these cases it is sensible to use AAC sound instead:
ffmpeg -i input.ogv
-c:v libx264 -preset veryslow -crf 22
-c:a aac -b:a 160k -strict -2
output.mp4
Newer versions of FFmpeg (i.e. released after December 5th 2015) will not need the
-strict -2
option but it is still needed for Xenial Xerus...
edited 13 mins ago
answered May 22 '14 at 6:17
andrew.46andrew.46
22.2k1469150
22.2k1469150
On Ubuntu 14.04 this command fails with the error message:Invalid encoder type 'libmp3lame'
.
– Luís de Sousa
Apr 28 '15 at 18:38
1
For 14.04 try installinglibavcodec-extra-54
and this should fix the issue... If compiling you will need the -dev file for lame:libmp3lame-dev
.
– andrew.46
May 1 '15 at 21:57
Some players, such as WMP and QuickTime, have trouble decoding some MP4 files that use MP3 audio (for WMP it depends on audio sample rate).
– llogan
Aug 5 '16 at 16:55
@LordNeckbeard Thanks for the tip, I have updated the answer, feel free to correct anything in it :)
– andrew.46
Aug 5 '16 at 22:08
add a comment |
On Ubuntu 14.04 this command fails with the error message:Invalid encoder type 'libmp3lame'
.
– Luís de Sousa
Apr 28 '15 at 18:38
1
For 14.04 try installinglibavcodec-extra-54
and this should fix the issue... If compiling you will need the -dev file for lame:libmp3lame-dev
.
– andrew.46
May 1 '15 at 21:57
Some players, such as WMP and QuickTime, have trouble decoding some MP4 files that use MP3 audio (for WMP it depends on audio sample rate).
– llogan
Aug 5 '16 at 16:55
@LordNeckbeard Thanks for the tip, I have updated the answer, feel free to correct anything in it :)
– andrew.46
Aug 5 '16 at 22:08
On Ubuntu 14.04 this command fails with the error message:
Invalid encoder type 'libmp3lame'
.– Luís de Sousa
Apr 28 '15 at 18:38
On Ubuntu 14.04 this command fails with the error message:
Invalid encoder type 'libmp3lame'
.– Luís de Sousa
Apr 28 '15 at 18:38
1
1
For 14.04 try installing
libavcodec-extra-54
and this should fix the issue... If compiling you will need the -dev file for lame: libmp3lame-dev
.– andrew.46
May 1 '15 at 21:57
For 14.04 try installing
libavcodec-extra-54
and this should fix the issue... If compiling you will need the -dev file for lame: libmp3lame-dev
.– andrew.46
May 1 '15 at 21:57
Some players, such as WMP and QuickTime, have trouble decoding some MP4 files that use MP3 audio (for WMP it depends on audio sample rate).
– llogan
Aug 5 '16 at 16:55
Some players, such as WMP and QuickTime, have trouble decoding some MP4 files that use MP3 audio (for WMP it depends on audio sample rate).
– llogan
Aug 5 '16 at 16:55
@LordNeckbeard Thanks for the tip, I have updated the answer, feel free to correct anything in it :)
– andrew.46
Aug 5 '16 at 22:08
@LordNeckbeard Thanks for the tip, I have updated the answer, feel free to correct anything in it :)
– andrew.46
Aug 5 '16 at 22:08
add a comment |
FF Multi Converter is another great choice, not only for successful .ogv
to .mp4
conversation. Simple, user-friendly and elegant interface, gives a complete log of conversion details, supports a huge list of formats (see below), gets the job done quickly.
Audio/Video formats:
aac, ac3, afc, aiff, amr, asf, au, avi, dvd, flac, flv, mka, mkv, mmf, mov, mp3, mp4, mpg, ogg, ogv, psp, rm, spx, vob, wav, webm, wma, wmv
And any other format supported by ffmpeg.
Image formats:
bmp, cgm, dpx, emf, eps, fpx, gif, jbig, jng, jpeg, mrsid, p7, pdf, picon, png, ppm, psd, rad, tga, tif, webp, xpm
And any other format supported by ImageMagick.
Document file formats:
doc -> odt, pdf
html -> odt
odp -> pdf, ppt
ods -> pdf
odt -> doc, html, pdf, rtf, sxw, txt, xml
ppt -> odp
rtf -> odt
sdw -> odt
sxw -> odt
txt -> odt
xls -> ods
xml -> doc, odt, pdf
Installing on Ubuntu - [Stable release]
To add the ppa to your system resources and install ffmulticonverter, open a terminal and type:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ffmulticonverter/stable
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install ffmulticonverter
By default ffmulticonverter will bring all of its optional dependencies (ffmpeg, pythonmagick, unoconv) as well.
If you wish, you can install ffmulticonverter alone and then install only the optional dependencies you like manually:
sudo apt-get install --no-install-recommends ffmulticonverter
Then you can install the rest of the dependencies separately, depending on what you want to convert:
If you wish to convert videos, install ffmpeg: sudo apt-get install ffmpeg
If you wish to convert documents, install unoconv: sudo apt-get install unoconv
If you wish to convert images, install python imagemagick: sudo apt-get install python-pythonmagick
1
This was an excellent program, with up to date version in RPM Fusion repo.
– hlovdal
May 9 '17 at 20:14
add a comment |
FF Multi Converter is another great choice, not only for successful .ogv
to .mp4
conversation. Simple, user-friendly and elegant interface, gives a complete log of conversion details, supports a huge list of formats (see below), gets the job done quickly.
Audio/Video formats:
aac, ac3, afc, aiff, amr, asf, au, avi, dvd, flac, flv, mka, mkv, mmf, mov, mp3, mp4, mpg, ogg, ogv, psp, rm, spx, vob, wav, webm, wma, wmv
And any other format supported by ffmpeg.
Image formats:
bmp, cgm, dpx, emf, eps, fpx, gif, jbig, jng, jpeg, mrsid, p7, pdf, picon, png, ppm, psd, rad, tga, tif, webp, xpm
And any other format supported by ImageMagick.
Document file formats:
doc -> odt, pdf
html -> odt
odp -> pdf, ppt
ods -> pdf
odt -> doc, html, pdf, rtf, sxw, txt, xml
ppt -> odp
rtf -> odt
sdw -> odt
sxw -> odt
txt -> odt
xls -> ods
xml -> doc, odt, pdf
Installing on Ubuntu - [Stable release]
To add the ppa to your system resources and install ffmulticonverter, open a terminal and type:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ffmulticonverter/stable
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install ffmulticonverter
By default ffmulticonverter will bring all of its optional dependencies (ffmpeg, pythonmagick, unoconv) as well.
If you wish, you can install ffmulticonverter alone and then install only the optional dependencies you like manually:
sudo apt-get install --no-install-recommends ffmulticonverter
Then you can install the rest of the dependencies separately, depending on what you want to convert:
If you wish to convert videos, install ffmpeg: sudo apt-get install ffmpeg
If you wish to convert documents, install unoconv: sudo apt-get install unoconv
If you wish to convert images, install python imagemagick: sudo apt-get install python-pythonmagick
1
This was an excellent program, with up to date version in RPM Fusion repo.
– hlovdal
May 9 '17 at 20:14
add a comment |
FF Multi Converter is another great choice, not only for successful .ogv
to .mp4
conversation. Simple, user-friendly and elegant interface, gives a complete log of conversion details, supports a huge list of formats (see below), gets the job done quickly.
Audio/Video formats:
aac, ac3, afc, aiff, amr, asf, au, avi, dvd, flac, flv, mka, mkv, mmf, mov, mp3, mp4, mpg, ogg, ogv, psp, rm, spx, vob, wav, webm, wma, wmv
And any other format supported by ffmpeg.
Image formats:
bmp, cgm, dpx, emf, eps, fpx, gif, jbig, jng, jpeg, mrsid, p7, pdf, picon, png, ppm, psd, rad, tga, tif, webp, xpm
And any other format supported by ImageMagick.
Document file formats:
doc -> odt, pdf
html -> odt
odp -> pdf, ppt
ods -> pdf
odt -> doc, html, pdf, rtf, sxw, txt, xml
ppt -> odp
rtf -> odt
sdw -> odt
sxw -> odt
txt -> odt
xls -> ods
xml -> doc, odt, pdf
Installing on Ubuntu - [Stable release]
To add the ppa to your system resources and install ffmulticonverter, open a terminal and type:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ffmulticonverter/stable
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install ffmulticonverter
By default ffmulticonverter will bring all of its optional dependencies (ffmpeg, pythonmagick, unoconv) as well.
If you wish, you can install ffmulticonverter alone and then install only the optional dependencies you like manually:
sudo apt-get install --no-install-recommends ffmulticonverter
Then you can install the rest of the dependencies separately, depending on what you want to convert:
If you wish to convert videos, install ffmpeg: sudo apt-get install ffmpeg
If you wish to convert documents, install unoconv: sudo apt-get install unoconv
If you wish to convert images, install python imagemagick: sudo apt-get install python-pythonmagick
FF Multi Converter is another great choice, not only for successful .ogv
to .mp4
conversation. Simple, user-friendly and elegant interface, gives a complete log of conversion details, supports a huge list of formats (see below), gets the job done quickly.
Audio/Video formats:
aac, ac3, afc, aiff, amr, asf, au, avi, dvd, flac, flv, mka, mkv, mmf, mov, mp3, mp4, mpg, ogg, ogv, psp, rm, spx, vob, wav, webm, wma, wmv
And any other format supported by ffmpeg.
Image formats:
bmp, cgm, dpx, emf, eps, fpx, gif, jbig, jng, jpeg, mrsid, p7, pdf, picon, png, ppm, psd, rad, tga, tif, webp, xpm
And any other format supported by ImageMagick.
Document file formats:
doc -> odt, pdf
html -> odt
odp -> pdf, ppt
ods -> pdf
odt -> doc, html, pdf, rtf, sxw, txt, xml
ppt -> odp
rtf -> odt
sdw -> odt
sxw -> odt
txt -> odt
xls -> ods
xml -> doc, odt, pdf
Installing on Ubuntu - [Stable release]
To add the ppa to your system resources and install ffmulticonverter, open a terminal and type:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ffmulticonverter/stable
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install ffmulticonverter
By default ffmulticonverter will bring all of its optional dependencies (ffmpeg, pythonmagick, unoconv) as well.
If you wish, you can install ffmulticonverter alone and then install only the optional dependencies you like manually:
sudo apt-get install --no-install-recommends ffmulticonverter
Then you can install the rest of the dependencies separately, depending on what you want to convert:
If you wish to convert videos, install ffmpeg: sudo apt-get install ffmpeg
If you wish to convert documents, install unoconv: sudo apt-get install unoconv
If you wish to convert images, install python imagemagick: sudo apt-get install python-pythonmagick
edited May 24 '14 at 3:55
answered Feb 19 '14 at 15:46
v2rv2r
6,429113948
6,429113948
1
This was an excellent program, with up to date version in RPM Fusion repo.
– hlovdal
May 9 '17 at 20:14
add a comment |
1
This was an excellent program, with up to date version in RPM Fusion repo.
– hlovdal
May 9 '17 at 20:14
1
1
This was an excellent program, with up to date version in RPM Fusion repo.
– hlovdal
May 9 '17 at 20:14
This was an excellent program, with up to date version in RPM Fusion repo.
– hlovdal
May 9 '17 at 20:14
add a comment |
protected by Community♦ Apr 18 '14 at 12:55
Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).
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Here's a tutorial how to compile ffmpeg x264: ffmpeg.org/trac/ffmpeg/wiki/UbuntuCompilationGuide
– Enissay
Oct 27 '12 at 2:01
Just want to mention that I successfully uploaded an ogv video to Youtube. I guess one could follow that path and then use an online Youtube to mp4 converter.
– Eyal Levin
Feb 19 '14 at 13:53