Nice interface at a first glance, for sure can be useful for users who would find using the actual thing too cumbersome. How does performance compare to the native app? Is any form of hardware decoding/encoding like h264_nvenc available? (I guess not?)
Note those only apply to scene_sad which is used for scene change detection and freeze detection and a few other things like mpdecimate -- it's a very specific use case
Nice interface at a first glance, for sure can be useful for users who would find using the actual thing too cumbersome. How does performance compare to the native app? Is any form of hardware decoding/encoding like h264_nvenc available? (I guess not?)
I would imagine the only way to use NVENC directly from a browser would be via WebCodecs.
Just a thought - is the text “Click to upload” with a cloud icon perhaps a bit misleading?
If it’s fully client side, then you are just opening a file in essence - no clouds in sight!
I agree something like a folder or file icon would be more accurate.
Any chance those AVX-512 optimizations they released a while ago work within this? [1]
[1] https://www.phoronix.com/news/FFmpeg-July-2025-AVX-512
Note those only apply to scene_sad which is used for scene change detection and freeze detection and a few other things like mpdecimate -- it's a very specific use case
I think WASM SIMD is only 128-bit wide.
From https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44717303 :
> Objective metrics and tools for video encoding and source signal quality: netflix/vmaf, easyVmaf, psy-ex/metrics, ffmpeg-quality-metrics,
netflix/vmaf: https://GitHub.com/netflix/vmwaf
gdavila/easyVmaf: https://github.com/gdavila/easyVmaf
psy-ex/metrics: https://github.com/psy-ex/metrics/
slhck/ffmpeg-quality-metrics: Calculate quality metrics with FFmpeg (SSIM, PSNR, VMAF, VIF) https://github.com/slhck/ffmpeg-quality-metrics
Something like this would be great too:
The Ardour Manual > Loudness Analyzer and Normalizer: https://manual.ardour.org/mixing/basic-mixing/loudness-analy...