Le nonidi 29 messidor, an CCXXIII, Emanuel Berg a écrit : > ffmpeg -i $song -i $movie ${name}-norm.$ext
> local song=$name.mp3 > ffmpeg -i $movie $song At both steps, you are transcoding. That means you are paying the MP3 toll twice, including CPU time and quality loss. I do not know how normalize-audio operates. It is theoretically possible to adjust the volume without transcoding, but I suppose this is tricky, and I do not know if normalize-audio implements it. If normalize-audio can do it, then using "-c copy" to avoid transcoding is the correct solution. If it can not, then use a raw PCM format as intermediate format; the obvious choice is WAVE. Also, you say that normalize-audio is lightning fast, this is bad sign, because computing the volume of a clip accurately is expensive. Regards, -- Nicolas George
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