

MystiQ has a different aim though: to make it very easy to transcode multimedia files with a simple and clean user interface that can be used immediately after opening the application for the first time, without needing to tweak or learn how to use it. For now, I find HandBrake to be more feature-packed, with extra options for applying filters, chapters, as well as more video options like framerate, choosing the video encoder yourself, and more. Some of you might be asking how this compares to HandBrake, a popular, well-established FFmpeg GUI. Advanced: additional FFmpeg options (command line options)Įxtra Mystiq multimedia converter options include the ability to set the number of threads to use when converting, set the ffmpeg, ffprobe and sox path, and shutdown / suspend / hibernate the computer when the application finishes converting the files.Cut HH:mm:ss from the video beginning and / or end.3D options: Red Cyan Color, Green Magenta Gray Monochromatic, Red Green Gray Monochromatic, Red Cyan Half Color, Green Magenta Color, Red Blue Gray Monochromatic, Red Cyan Dubois, Yellow Blue Color.

Rotate 90 degrees clockwise / counterclockwise.This is the list of conversion parameters (advanced options) available when you click the Edit button next to Preset: When the conversion was done though, it changed from "100%" to "Finished". I want to note that in my test, the conversion progress bar didn't work, being at 100% from the beginning to the end of the conversion. When the application finishes the conversion it sends a desktop notification files that have been converted also have a Finished text next to them in the MistiQ user interface. Once the files have been added, click the Convert button from the MystiQ toolbar and the transcoding beings. Advanced: Want to use custom settings for the output format? Click the Edit button next to Preset (or double click a video already added to MystiQ), and you'll access the Conversion Parameters dialog (screenshot above) from where you can choose from many options, including audio and video bitrate, insert subtitles, rotate the video, set the video height and width, and even add additional FFmpeg command line options.
