River Past Video Slice is an easy-to-use and
fast video trimmer and splitter software for cutting the video to the
exact frame for your editing and authoring needs.
It provides a preview window with full control, including play, pause,
stop, and frame accurate step backward and step forward. This allows you
to get to the exact frame for the editing. It features a clear time line
editing window, allowing you to trim video and/or cut video into segments.
Both continuous and discontinuous segments are allowed.
It accepts a wide range of video formats, including 3GPP/3GPP2, ASF,
AVI, DAT(VCD), DivX, FLC/FLI Flic animation, animated GIF, QuickTime MOV,
MP4 (MPEG-4), MPEG-1, WMV, and XviD. You can either output to AVI or WMV.
You can choose your video and/or audio codecs, video quality, video size,
frame rate, audio sample rate, channel, and bitrate.
|
Key Features:
Ease of Use River Past Video Slice is designed to make it easy to cut your
video. Instead of being loaded with features you don't use, it is
the software you should use when you want to cut your video like
a movie director.
You may want to trim scrambled images at the beginning of your
video. You may only want some segments. You may want to break your
two hour long recording into smaller pieces. No problem, with a
clear time line, preview window, and simple-to-use controls, you
can trim, cut, split your video whatever way you want.
Input Flexibility River Past Video Cleaner supports a wide range of input file formats.
We even support Apple's QuickTime files (.mov and .qt). This is
the only software which can convert MOV to AVI or WMV correctly.
Output Control You have the full control over the output file format. For AVI,
you can define the codec, video size, frame rate, audio sample rate,
channel, resolution, and bitrate. For WMV, you can choose from a
list of pre-defined profiles, targeted at different usages.
Frame Accuracy We even have step backward and step forward controls to help you
to get to the extract frame for your editing. Pause your video,
and use those two buttons. The preview window reflect the current
image as the time cursor moves frame by frame.
|
|