Àwọn àkọlé àwọn àkọlé tí a fi pamọ́ látigbá tí a bá yí FLV padà sí MPG?
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Soft subtitles (selectable tracks) survive when MPG can carry them: MKV holds SRT, ASS, SSA, PGS, VobSub natively; MP4 only holds mov_text (a stripped-down format). Converting an MKV with ASS styled subs to MP4 will typically downgrade them to mov_text or burn them in. Hardsubs (burned into the video) carry over regardless.
Does FLV to MPG keep chapter markers / DVD-style navigation?
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Chapter metadata transfers between FLV and MPG whenever both containers support a chapter atom (MKV, MP4, MOV). WebM stores chapters in a Matroska-compatible block, so MKV <-> WebM chapters round-trip cleanly. AVI has no chapter spec, so converting AVI to MPG produces an unchaptered file unless you add markers manually.
Kini ìròyìn àwọn àpàlẹ̀ MKV (ì̀dáràn, àwọn àwọn àwòrán ìsàlẹ̀-ilà) látigbà tí a bá lọ sí FLV sí MPG?
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MKV is the only mainstream container that stores arbitrary attached files (TTF fonts for ASS subs, JPG cover art, fan-translated PDF inserts). Going from FLV to MPG drops these attachments when MPG is not MKV — the elementary streams convert, but the attached payload stays in the source. Keep FLV as a backup if you depend on attached fonts.
Which codec does the MPG output use by default?
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The default codec is chosen to match the MPG container conservatively: MKV defaults to H.265 (HEVC) for better compression; MP4 defaults to H.264 for the widest device support; WebM defaults to VP9; AVI uses MPEG-4 ASP (DivX/Xvid lineage). Override via the advanced codec dropdown — AV1 is available for MKV / WebM where you want maximum compression and can wait through the encode.
Kini idi ti fáìlì mì MPG tí o kù ju FLV lọ látigbá tí a tí yipadà?
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Same-codec remux produces a near-identical size (container overhead differs by 0.1-2%). A codec change can swing the size by 50% or more: H.264 to H.265 typically halves the file at the same visual quality; H.264 to AV1 halves it again on a slow preset. Going from a high-bitrate FLV (Blu-ray rip) to a low-bitrate MPG (web upload) is the most common reason for a dramatic drop.
Yà sí 8K (7680x4320) lórí Prẹ́mìmù. Àwọn ìpele àìfẹ́fẹ́ náà ń ṣakoso 4K (3840x2160) sí ìpele fáìlì 1 GB. Àwọn remuxes tí a fi pamọ́ (àwọn ìpàsẹ́ àwọn kódékì tí a tí kọ́ nínú) tí o ju FLV lọ sí MPG ní àwọn ìṣàfilọ́lẹ̀ dískì I/O tí kò jẹ́ CPU — 30 GB FLV tí a fi pamọ́ sí MPG nínú àwọn ìṣàfilọ́lẹ̀ àwọn píxel. Ṣàfikún àwọn ìṣàmúlò-ètò láti inú àwọn píxel.
Àwọn fáìlì mìí FLV jẹ́ aládàkọ́ nígbà ìṣàfarawé MPG?
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Yes — uploaded FLV files are processed in isolated workers and deleted within minutes of completion. We never view, store, retain, or share the content. See /privacy/ for the data retention window. The conversion pipeline runs on hardware we control end-to-end; no third-party APIs receive your file.
Ń lè fi àwọn fáìlì FLV pamọ́, pẹ̀lú ìṣàfarawé MPG?
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Not in the same job — keep conversion focused on container / codec. Use /trim/ to clip the FLV first, then queue the FLV -> MPG step. For joining several clips into one MPG, the /merge/ tool stitches them on a per-codec basis (it remuxes when the inputs share a codec, re-encodes otherwise) and emits a single MPG file at the end.
FLV (Fidio Flash) jẹ ọna kika eiyan fidio ti o dagbasoke nipasẹ Adobe. O ti wa ni commonly lo fun online fidio sisanwọle ati ki o ni atilẹyin nipasẹ Adobe Flash Player.