![]() ![]() It also allows you to work through the Command Line or DLL if you wish and is fully integrated with the MS-Windows shell (drag 'n' drop and Context menu). You can customize any viewing method to suit your preferences. With MediaInfo's graphical Interface, you can quickly gather and view the following information about an audio or video file title, author, director, album, track number, date, duration, as well as video and audio codec, aspect, fps, bitrate, sample rate, channels, and language. Then right-click menu option to click to get the info is, who would have guessed it, "Media Info".MediaInfo is a free app for Windows and Linux to supply the user with useful technical and tag information about a video or audio file. ![]() After loading an audio or video file, it can be accessed via the right-click menu or by pressing "Alt & J". To analyze other media types, short of starting the application manually, the only right-click alternatives left to users seem to be long-winded fiddling along the "Open with" or "Send to" routes (it's possible I missed a faster method, of course, but I was too lazy to invest enormous amounts of time and effort trying to make Vista work for me and gave up on it very quickly).īTW, (the IMHO excellent) KMPlayer apparently uses a version of the same engine to display media information. In Vista, unfortunately, as so often, intuitive and quick has been abolished and direct right-click access works only sporadically, for a limited number of formats. Very easy and fast to use too, at least in Win XP, where the Windows Explorer right-click menu has a "Media Info" entry in case of nearly all media formats - which is intuitive and fast, the way most of us like to work, I guess. ![]() The most informative of all freeware media analysis tools I'm aware of. ![]()
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