Shutter encoder mkv to mp44/10/2024 I still have 17.4.6 installed and checked there and for sure, no AAC decode support. If you can find me a DR17 version I can download where I can see AAC decode work, I'd be very interested to see it. Maybe BM at some point made a blunder and built it with AAC decode support and fixed it afterward and you were lucky to download that build. It was never supported and I've never seen it work in DR17. I'm sure if I understood it the way you do, I'd get it. I'm probably ignorant to how all this works internally which is why it doesn't make a lot of sense to me. I'm surprised no one has made a GUI for FFMpeg for Linux if it's so much faster. I guess a 1 hour video would take all day. mov to mp4 in Shutter Encoder and it took 10 minutes. I did a 15 second test video converted from. If that's the case then I guess Linux users got screwed which is a real bummer since it's the best platform available. It seems like if it changed once, it can change again unless other features they included requires that change. Why then did it work fine in DR 17 on Linux but doesn't on DR 18+? Something must have changed. wav file is the same : Your source files are probably MP4 with AAC audio and AAC codec is not supported on linux, even for decode. The external plugin I was talking about integrate with DR so that the format in question shows up natively in the deliver page of resolve and not as a separate step. Smunaut wrote:'Shutter Encoder' is a whole external application. PS: I do use Quicktime for now to render then convert it to mp4. I did install a couple of AAC packages but so far no joy on that solution. I would much prefer BM Design/DR fixed this or suggested a package I could install that would fix it. I use it of course, but I like to avoid it as much as possible.įor what it's worth, I did just try to use FFmpeg in the terminal and didn't really get anywhere even after watching a video on how to do it. I like Linux because it's the most stable platform but it's a love/hate relationship with the terminal. I can follow directions and cut and paste with the best of them but using it in Linux is something I try to stay away from if I can. I'm just not good with command line stuff. Inconvenient, for sure and I'd much rather have the option to encode audio directly in resolve, but it's a better workaround than re-encoding the whole video externally. It takes less than a minute of processing even for 1h videos. Smunaut wrote:As a side note, you can encode to `.MOV` (selecting whatever video codec) and selecting `PCM` for Audio.Īnd then using ffmpeg to just convert to mp4 and just compressing the audio, and copying the video stream (no re-encoding).
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