Machete. It's low-cost, but *not* one of the freebies. (There is a "lite" version that _is_ free, with less in the way of features.) Like most non-pro video editors, it cuts on keyframes only -- generally an acceptable trade-off for me. It covers a number of video file formats, though the lack of .Mpg format as one of them is a shortcoming. The program's major virtue is that it is really simple and straightforward: very few -- if any -- others out there that you can just pick up and start using right away for making cuts, with hardly any learning curve involved. (You don't have to learn how to handle a real video editing timeline, for instance.) And it is most often all the editor I need. My runner up in the ease-of-learning / ease-of-use had been the 6th. version of Movica, but that one only did .Wmv & .Asf formats (I think), and development on it ceased quite some time ago.
converter pps em video
converter pps em video
Machete. It's low-cost, but *not* one of the freebies. (There is a "lite" version that _is_ free, with less in the way of features.) Like most non-pro video editors, it cuts on keyframes only -- generally an acceptable trade-off for me. It covers a number of video file formats, though the lack of .Mpg format as one of them is a shortcoming. The program's major virtue is that it is really simple and straightforward: very few -- if any -- others out there that you can just pick up and start using right away for making cuts, with hardly any learning curve involved. (You don't have to learn how to handle a real video editing timeline, for instance.) And it is most often all the editor I need. My runner up in the ease-of-learning / ease-of-use had been the 6th. version of Movica, but that one only did .Wmv & .Asf formats (I think), and development on it ceased quite some time ago.