Miro Video Converter works really well for all those formats.
Miro Video Converter works really well for all those formats. It's essentially a wrapper UI for ffmpeg and has limited options but does a good job. You can also display the ffmpeg command log and tweak the command if the default output doesn't satisfy you.It's also free.
Miro is great, but wondering if there are also some APIs to automate encoding – JewelThief Jun 22 at 17:49.
You might want to take a look at VLC's conversion functionality. It can export in a number of different formats using export plug-ins, and has a handy encoding queue as well. As of right now I know it can do H.264 as well as Theora ... I'm not sure about WebM ... my version doesn't, but there may be an encoding plug-in coming that will do that as well.
Best of all, VLC is free. Hope this helps, Jason.
FYI I tried Miro, and ran into some odd conversion issues. My . Ogg files were fine, but my .
Webm files were a bit wonky. They'd play/run fine locally, but I'd get an error with the file when I uploaded it to my server (it would play once, and then hang every time thereafter). I had some luck with Firefogg, which I ended up using without problems.
However, both Miro and Firefogg are more of a one file, click, convert approach. If you're wanting to do a large batch, here's a guide that a friend sent to me, from Brett Terpstra: Automating HTML5 Video Encodes. It's way over my head... but perhaps of some use to you.
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