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Video to gid
Video to gid




video to gid
  1. #VIDEO TO GID HOW TO#
  2. #VIDEO TO GID DOWNLOAD#

#VIDEO TO GID DOWNLOAD#

We’re here to explore how you can easily download a YouTube video and turn it into a GIF. I mean, if YouTube was a major, we would probably have a PhD in it.īut what about sending a video or GIFs over to your friends or co-workers when you just need those five epic seconds, not a whole 10-minute show? When it comes to social sharing, messaging, and incorporating videos into presentations and blog posts, it may be not that handy. by the way if there are any ways to optimise this command to make it run faster without losing quality I might be able to keep the current way of functioning with heroku although I would still prefer some iOS solution.We know almost everything about YouTube when it comes to watching our favourite channels. Where basically I did 100 / (dft * 100) for the input frame rate and just output at the same fps for 15 seconds.

video to gid

I'm adding the ffmpeg command line equivalent to what I would love to be able to do (if I could use ffmpeg directly with iOS this could be nice too) ffmpeg -framerate 100/13 -loop 1 -i frame%02d.png -c:v libx264 -r 100/13 -pix_fmt yuv420p -t 0:15 instagram.mp4

video to gid

I would appreciate any tips/code sample/tutorials on the subject.

#VIDEO TO GID HOW TO#

I've also looked around to see if anyone made an extensive tutorial on how to use ffmpeg in swift but I still didn't find anything at my level and I didn't even find a tutorial per se, only some GitHub projects which were partially completed and/or without the original tutorial linked to understand the thought process. he has a gpu or at least a much better cpu than the dynos heroku have to offer.

video to gid

he has a float value representing how long each frame should last dft.Using bandwidth nowadays is much cheaper than buying extra processing power on a server. So the idea I had was to make the app create the video since he already has all the information he needs for this, and then simply upload it with the rest of the frames and relevant data. The issue is this makes it so that my heroku server bills aren't as low as I would like because of the limited memory on the dynos and the time it takes to generate these videos is of about 5-10 seconds I believe (not sure but it's longer than I'd like) Now what is currently the workflow is that these frames are sent back to a server with any relevant information I want and then the server would use imagemagick to create a real gif file and ffmpeg to create a 15 seconds video using said gif. I have an app which takes n photos every cft (capture frame time which I get from a backend server) seconds (it's a double for obvious reasons) I then display these frames using a UIImageView and the frames change every dft (display frame time which I also get from a backend server and can be different from cft). I've looked around and found a few things here and there, mainly that I should be using AVAssetWriter to do this but I have 0 experience with this and video editing/creation so it doesn't help me much since I can't seem to find anything that does something I can modify easily (or not at my level of knowledge at least) so that it works as I intend it to.






Video to gid