April 12, 2016

How to Use Handbrake to Convert Any Video File to Any Format

If you’ve ever wanted to convert a video file, but weren’t sure what to use, then Handbrake might be the program for you. Today we’ll show you how to use it to convert video files into different formats.
There are a lot of applications out there that purport to convert video files. They’ll advertise themselves as free and sport a flashy interface, but as we’re all too well aware, most of these programs are just plain crap. Moreover, they often come packaged with toolbars or malware so what started off as an innocent attempt to simply convert a video turns into a trip to the computer store to get your laptop fixed.


Handbrake?

 

Handbrake has been around around for over ten years and remains one of the best applications out there for transcoding video files from one format to another. Handbrake is open source and completely free of any attached strings or shady offers; you only get what you download, nothing else.
Finally, it’s available for Windows, Mac, and Ubuntu with a GUI interface or as a command line tool. In this article, we’ll be using the Windows GUI version.

A Quick Look at the Program

 

Handbrake is without a doubt, one of the easiest video converter programs around.





Along the top row are six buttons where you can manipulate essential functions, such as opening your source file, adding a job to the queue, and a simple “Start” button, which says it all.





Below these buttons are your Source and Destination features. Destination, of course, allows you to choose where your converted file is saved and what it is called. Source displays basic information about your source file: titles in the file, angles, and dropdown buttons that will allow you to convert your file by chapter, time (seconds), or frames.





Finally, there are your Output settings. There’s a ton of stuff here. You can adjust your video and audio quality, add subtitles, and much more.





We’re not going to even bother with any of these though. Today, we’re just going to show you the simplest way to convert one video file format to another.

 

Converting Made Easy

 

Here’s the situation, we really want to play a file in a Google Chrome tab so we can then cast it to our TV. The problem is, the file won’t play because it’s in a format Chrome doesn’t support. What do we do?
In this example, the format of our source file is .MKV or Matroska file format. This type of file is very popular with purveyors of anime and foreign films because it allows them to be distributed with extra features such as subtitles and multiple languages. That said, .MKV may play perfectly in an all-in-one solution like VLC, but it often meets resistance from other players like Windows Media Player and Chrome. 
So, we want to convert our .MKV file to an .MP4 file, which is compatible with just about anything you play it on. If you have an .MP4 file, chances are you’ll be able to watch it with no problem.
The first thing we do then is select our source. Click the “Source” button and choose “Open File” from the dropdown choices.





Browse your file system to where the troublesome file is located, select it, and click “Open.”





Now you see the file we’re converting listed under the Source heading.
For this operation, we’re making no adjustments to anything in the Output Settings. This is a straight conversion from .MKV to .MP4, so we’ll leave the container setting as is. The only other thing to do is tell Handbrake where to put our new file, and what to call it.





We click “Browse” for our file Destination, choose a location for our new file, as well as give it a fitting name. We’ll go ahead and save the file in the same location as our source and click “Save.”





Back on Handbrake’s main window, we give our transcoding job one more look and click “Start.”





Depending now upon your computer’s speed and the size of the file, this operation could take a few minutes or a few hours. You can note Handbrake’s progress at the bottom of the application window. Here you see our file is almost six-percent complete, and has almost nineteen minutes remaining (estimated).





When our file is done, we should be able to play it in Chrome. And, success, we can now easily play this file on virtually any video player, phone, tablet, and, of course, cast it to our big screen TV in the living room!





Handbrake is easy to use, risk free, and we are able to achieve very desirable results, simply using the default settings. It goes without saying, we recommend you use it, rather than playing download roulette and possibly installing a terrible piece of software on your system.


Source: http://www.howtogeek.com/199618/how-to-use-handbrake-to-convert-any-video-file-to-any-format/

April 5, 2016

Best Free Burning Software: Top Programs for Copying, Ripping, and Burning

Keep your MP3s and other media files safe by backing up to disc.

By

Even though software media players such as iTunes, Winamp, and Windows Media Player are able to burn music to CD, you will have probably discovered that most are very limited on what they can do. Using a dedicated burning program gives you the flexibility to burn music, video, and other types of files to CD, DVD, and even Blu-ray; this can open up a lot more possibilities on the way you use and store your digital media. The software listed below has been selected specifically for its usefulness and ease-of-use when dealing with digital media.

1. CDBurnerXP Pro 4





CDBurnerXP has very good support for burning to several types of optical media discs including: DVD, CD, and Blur-ray. You can burn music to CD as either an audio CD, or a data CD (MP3, AAC, OGG, etc.). If can be installed on Windows 2000/XP/2003/Vista/7 and offers a user-friendly interface. You can create audio CDs using MP3, OGG, FLAC, WMA, and WAV files. A neat feature of CDBurnerXP is the facility to directly add tracks to your compilation from audio CDs without having to rip the tracks first. Finally, this free burning software program also comes with a convenient integrated audio player in order to play your music.



2. Ashampoo Burning Studio Free

Even though Burning Studio Free only supports MP3 and WMA formats, it more than makes up for this shortfall by its sizable feature set. This free burning program supports CD, DVD, and Blu-ray drives giving you flexible storage options. It’s intuitive interface gives you access to tasks such as ripping and burning audio/data CDs, backup files and folders, burn movies, create ISO/BIN images, and a copier for duplicating CDs,DVDs, and Blu-ray discs.

3. BurnAware Free

Available for the Windows operating systems (7 / Vista / XP / 2000 / NT), BurnAware Free is an optical disc authoring program that supports CD, DVD, and Blu-ray -- it can handle a wide array of audio formats too. This light-weight, but functional program supports MP3, WMA, FLAC, AAC, WAV, OGG, and M4a. If you've got files in the ISO format, then this program also supports disk image burning to DVD, CD, etc. The program is also capable of creating video DVDs which can then be played on a standard DVD player or games console (Xbox 360, PS3, etc.)for example.

4. FinalBurner Free

FinalBurner Free enables you to create data/audio CDs, video DVDs, and make ISO images. There’s also a built-in CD ripper that is capable of encoding MP3 and WMA files in varying bitrates. FinalBurner has good file format support when creating audio CDs. You can import MP3, WMA, OGG, WAV, AAC, along with less popular formats like MID, and music modules (XM, MOD) that are used in music sequencers (trackers). As with all the burning programs in this article, FinalBurner has enough options to be a good substitute for expensive products such as Nero, etc.

5. Free Audio CD Burner

If you just want a simple program to create audio CDs then you won’t go far wrong with Free Audio CD Burner. Even though it only supports the writing of CDs, it can decode MP3 and WMA files in realtime, thus saving time and hard drive space.

6. ImgBurn
ImgBurn is a lightweight CD / DVD / HD DVD / Blu-ray burning application that everyone should have in their toolkit!
It has several 'Modes', each one for performing a different task:


  • Read - Read a disc to an image file
  • Build - Create an image file from files on your computer or network - or you can write the files directly to a disc
  • Write - Write an image file to a disc
  • Verify - Check a disc is 100% readable. Optionally, you can also have ImgBurn compare it against a given image file to ensure the actual data is correct
  • Discovery - Put your drive / media to the test! Used in combination with DVDInfoPro, you can check the quality of the burns your drive is producing

    You can download it here:
    http://www.imgburn.com/index.php?act=download
  Source: http://mp3.about.com/od/essentialsoftware/tp/Best_Free_Burning_software.htm