π π π π π π π π on Nostr: ηΏ ζη³ You can check the encoder used with a simple ffprobe -i <filename>. I ...
ηΏ ζη³ (npub1x2vβ¦ar98)
You can check the encoder used with a simple ffprobe -i <filename>.
I recall I did record screen once with ffmpeg directly and saved the footage to uncompressed h264 as the CPU usage was trivial, it worked fine, as long as you didn't run out of storage.
You can check the encoder used with a simple ffprobe -i <filename>.
I recall I did record screen once with ffmpeg directly and saved the footage to uncompressed h264 as the CPU usage was trivial, it worked fine, as long as you didn't run out of storage.