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Outlander S02e05 Ffmpeg -

Share your best flags (or your worst audio desync horror stories) in the comments. Droughtlander is hard enough without bad video codecs. Convert wisely.

Here’s how I used FFmpeg to tame my Outlander episode. I wanted a 45-second clip of Dougal rallying the troops. With iMovie? Painful. With FFmpeg? One line:

ffmpeg -i Outlander.S02E05.mkv -itsoffset 0.5 -i Outlander.S02E05.mkv -map 0:v -map 1:a -c copy fixed_audio.mkv For the non-coders: that says "take the video from the first file, take the audio from the second file but delay it by half a second, and stitch them together." No quality loss. Jamie would approve of this pragmatic violence. My phone doesn’t speak DTS. FFmpeg speaks everything. outlander s02e05 ffmpeg

FFmpeg is the Jamie Fraser of video tools: rugged, command-line driven, surprisingly fast with a sword (or codec), and once you learn its language, it will never let you down.

Enter . The "Mark me, this is inefficient" Moment You know how Claire is always frustrated by 18th-century medicine? That’s how I feel about GUI video editors. They crash, they watermark your output, and they take forty minutes to export a 30-second clip. Share your best flags (or your worst audio

ffmpeg -i Outlander.S02E05.mkv -ss 00:23:15 -to 00:24:00 -c copy dougal_speech.mp4 -ss is the start time, -to is the end time. The magic is -c copy , which tells FFmpeg to not re-encode the video. It just snips. It’s lossless. It’s instant. It’s like Claire jumping through the stones—zero lag. 2. Fixing the Audio Sync (The Claire Problem) In my downloaded version, the audio was 0.5 seconds behind the video. Nothing ruins a dramatic "Mark me!" like lips moving after the sound.

Use FFmpeg to create a loop of Claire rolling her eyes at 18th-century hygiene. You know you want to. Here’s how I used FFmpeg to tame my Outlander episode

I am the second kind.