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However, it's slow to export and about as slow as the Quicktime method. Method 3: iMovie - this is my go-to method for splicing clips together and complex trimming (removing segments in the middle). One downside is that I cant tweak the start point once I start recording, I cant see ahead and if it goes too far ill have to trim it a second time, and there are pauses at the beginning and end. Method 2: VLC - It's clunky, but faster than Quicktime and better suited to my needs. Then delete the original mp4 and the mov, and I've finally got the trimmed mp4.
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Import this MOV into Premiere Rush (which takes a long time to launch and is slow), tell premiere to export to mp4, and wait a minute. Method 1: Quicktime - Open the MP4 video in Quicktime, trim it using an ios-like interface, and save the video as a MOV (no option to overwrite or to save as MP4). It will save as mp4 and I can overwrite the video by selecting the original video before saving (giving the new video the same name). On Windows, I open the photo, click edit, drag the bars to where I would like to cut, and I save.
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So I have a simple task that I do a lot: trimming a video's head and tail off.
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