How to stitch .mov files FAST???

B
Posted By
Billy
Oct 17, 2009
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1138
Replies
4
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Closed
Does anyone know of a method of stitching .mov or other movie formats very fast or without recompiling into a new file? I want to be able to merge multiple movies into one file but not have to wait for the entire movie to get redone – which sometimes can take hours!!! It’s just too time consuming…..

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J
jaSPAMc
Oct 17, 2009
Billy found these unused words:

Does anyone know of a method of stitching .mov or other movie formats very fast or without recompiling into a new file? I want to be able to merge multiple movies into one file but not have to wait for the entire movie to get redone – which sometimes can take hours!!! It’s just too time consuming…..

Copy file1, file2, file3, filex to filenew — typed in the RUN box.
J
jjs
Oct 18, 2009
In article ,
Sir F. A. Rien wrote:

Billy found these unused words:

Does anyone know of a method of stitching .mov or other movie formats very fast or without recompiling into a new file? I want to be able to merge multiple movies into one file but not have to wait for the entire movie to get redone – which sometimes can take hours!!! It’s just too time consuming…..

Copy file1, file2, file3, filex to filenew — typed in the RUN box.

Have you tried that with success?
J
jaSPAMc
Oct 18, 2009
John Stafford found these unused words:

In article ,
Sir F. A. Rien wrote:

Billy found these unused words:

Does anyone know of a method of stitching .mov or other movie formats very fast or without recompiling into a new file? I want to be able to merge multiple movies into one file but not have to wait for the entire movie to get redone – which sometimes can take hours!!! It’s just too time consuming…..

Copy file1, file2, file3, filex to filenew — typed in the RUN box.

Have you tried that with success?

Long time ago – also works with .mpg and other ‘split’ files.

Easier now to just drag and drop in an editor, then ‘save project as’.
J
Joel
Oct 18, 2009
John Stafford wrote:

In article ,
Sir F. A. Rien wrote:

Billy found these unused words:

Does anyone know of a method of stitching .mov or other movie formats very fast or without recompiling into a new file? I want to be able to merge multiple movies into one file but not have to wait for the entire movie to get redone – which sometimes can take hours!!! It’s just too time consuming…..

Copy file1, file2, file3, filex to filenew — typed in the RUN box.

Have you tried that with success?

From the OLD DOS then I have used this command quite often to combine text files. For binary, I think it may need some extra command but I am not 100% sure.

Also, back to DOS age, I was using 4DOS which had many advanced DOS commands comparing to MS DOS command. Here is an example that I used to use.

Dir *.* > DIR.TXT <=- it will display and write the directory to file name DIR.TXT

Dir *.* >> DIR.TXT <=- will expanding the current to existing DIR.TXT file

And the COPY command

Copy file1+file2+file3+file4 FILE-ALL

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