Handbrake is a great program and I use it, but a lot of people don't have it, and they might have VLC. When it's done, open your new file in VLC (or whatever, really) and see that it does not have audio. VLC will look like it's speeding through the file (depending on the speed of your PC) but no video will play. Leave the Video codec tab alone, though you may have cause to change it for another job. Leave encapsulation alone (this is the container you're producing, and it's probably fine. You can choose another one, but I wouldn't worry too much.Ĭlick the tools/setting icon to the immediate right (wrench and screwdriver in an X formation). MP4 and MKV are 'container' files that contain mixed media that is muxed (mixed) together. For the sample video I chose (Netflix's Death Note trailer, downloaded from YouTube) "Video - H.264 + MP3 (MP4)" is selected. Click Convert/Save at the bottom.Ĭhoose a profile. People often overlook VLC, but it's pretty good at converting formats.Īdd → browse to the video in question. Why can't you just click on the selected IN-OUT portion, then on the top right hand side, turn the audio down?Ī simple task that is anything but simple. Turns out I muted the whole video so back to the beginning with that then. I can add it to some queue but now I have to waste life trying to find a "go" button to export it. But I can't save the video? I'll try export. Adobe gives me a chance to save the project file - okay, that's good. MS Word, click Save As and you can save it as anything. Why Adobe in particular has to make things difficult I don't know. Then managed to mute it - great! But now I can't save it. Managed to figure the way out to make a selection of the audio I want removing. I seem to have made a section of the video with no audio but it's only that section and I can't get it to replicate on the main video, so useless. Programs like Video Re-Do are great but there's no simple option to delete the audio.ĭownloaded Lightworks but I don't have a clue what I am doing. There's a couple of great features hidden in the user-preferences.I have a video file (mp4) that I want to delete or replace the audio from a little section of it. The last part of the search-result concerns the Video-editor and here you'll notice that the options for muting and un-muting strips seems to be duplicated - but they're not. I can't remember the default key-settings, but I now have: Edit clips of all sizes directly in-browser without the hassle of inconvenient uploads. OpenShot Video Editor is an award-winning, open-source video editor, available on Linux, Mac, and Windows. We even have a quick and simple Facebook Video Ad Maker that you can check out before heading over to the video editor. OpenShot can create stunning videos, films, and animations with an easy-to-use interface and rich set of features. Easily export your video creations without watermarks. Like other programs for editing videos for semiprofessionals, OpenShot allows you to put videos together from clips, photos, and audio files. With Clipchamp, you can export 480p videos with no watermark for free. Un-Mute everything BUT the selected = Alt+Jįurthermore if you open the 'select' menu - you'll find options for selecting "all strips to the right/left" or just "strips to the right/left".Mute everything BUT the selected = Alt+H. The last one selects only strips on the same channel as the currently selected, whereas the first selects all to the right/left regardless of channel. These can also be used to mute/unmute a boatload of strips in one go, and of course you can define your own keyb.
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