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dcba
Safari has a built-in gizmo that allows you to DL the vids in either .flv or .mpg format. You cannot find simpler than this.
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open-g
For PC I'd recommend Freemake Video Downloader and Converter.
[www.freemake.com]
>>I'm usually to lazy to care about downloading, but can you download Youtube clips to a disc and pop it into your regular DVD? With decent quality?<<
it does exactly that and many other things, like extracting the sound of a clip into mp3....and more.
...and it don't cost a penny.
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open-g
if I had responded it would have consisted out of a lot of these:
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dishevelmentblues
try orbit, then once opened click on tools / grab++ and try thay ? Good luck !
[www.orbitdownloader.com]
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billwebster
Why don't you just go to the cache folder from your browser, search out the most recent big file which for sure is the video you just downloaded, copy it to the directory you want it to be in and rename it to *.flv ?
This is the manual way with which you don't need to worry about any additional software.
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billwebster
I cannot help with how to get these files to play from a DVD though.
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billwebster
Why don't you just go to the cache folder from your browser, search out the most recent big file which for sure is the video you just downloaded, copy it to the directory you want it to be in and rename it to *.flv ?
This is the manual way with which you don't need to worry about any additional software.
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[email protected]
I use two programs. WMRecorder and Factory Format. Both recommended by IORR posters on a previous thread. FF is free, WMR is not. I have found that anything streamed at less than 720i will show up as grainy and pixelated when replayed on a wide screen TV. I burned the Jeff Beck/Rod Stewart footage from the EL Rey on YouTube and it turned out darn good. Remember, YouTube video is highly compressed. The higher the streaming rate, 720i to 1020iHD, the better the video/audio quality. Hope this helps.
Scotty,
Irvine, CA
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Sleepy CityQuote
[email protected]
I use two programs. WMRecorder and Factory Format. Both recommended by IORR posters on a previous thread. FF is free, WMR is not. I have found that anything streamed at less than 720i will show up as grainy and pixelated when replayed on a wide screen TV. I burned the Jeff Beck/Rod Stewart footage from the EL Rey on YouTube and it turned out darn good. Remember, YouTube video is highly compressed. The higher the streaming rate, 720i to 1020iHD, the better the video/audio quality. Hope this helps.
Scotty,
Irvine, CA
If you already have this can you try to download the video above? I've been recommended over half a dozen different programmes & none of them have worked so far, so I'd like to know for certain before installing more stuff...
Thank you.
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bustedtrousers
The Download Helper is a Firefox add-on which puts an icon in your toolbar that becomes animated whenever something downloadable is on your screen. Anytime that happens, as far as youtube goes, I've also been able to get it by way of the cache. With your video, the icon doesn't become animated, it doesn't show up in the cache, and YouTube Downloader and other such programs also won't work. There's something about that video, some copyright protection and/or some difference in format, that makes it unable to download.
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HighwireC
Those vids are from "Official Channels" on youtube and they are protected, you can't download them.
Here is another protected site:
[www.youtube.com]
...
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Sleepy CityQuote
HighwireC
Those vids are from "Official Channels" on youtube and they are protected, you can't download them.
Here is another protected site:
[www.youtube.com]
...
There's always a way round these things...usually.