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Frame 0.26.0 is a lightweight yet powerful multimedia conversion tool created by independent developer Marek Jóźwiak and distributed under an open-source license. Positioned in the Video Software category, the program wraps the full command-line feature set of FFmpeg inside a modern, hardware-accelerated desktop shell built on the just-released Tauri v2 framework. Users can drag batches of clips into the window, choose from ready-made encoding presets or craft custom command lines through an intuitive Svelte 5 dashboard, and watch real-time progress bars while a Rust-based scheduler parallelizes every job across available CPU and GPU cores. Typical use cases include re-encoding phone footage for social platforms, stripping or adding audio tracks, normalizing codecs for editing suites, creating GIF sequences, extracting frames, downscaling 4 K proxies for offline editing, and generating HLS or Web-optimized MP4 streams with CRF, bitrate, or GOP accuracy. Version 0.26.0 ships as the second public release, improving concurrent queue handling, adding dark-mode theming, and exposing granular color-space and HDR metadata controls that formerly required manual FFmpeg flags. Because the entire FFmpeg binary is bundled, Frame runs portably without further dependencies on Windows 10/11 and automatically detects NVIDIA, AMD, and Intel hardware encoders for faster throughput. The software is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources (e.g. winget), always delivering the latest version, and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.
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