4K Video Downloader

4K Video Downloader
Developer(s) Open Media LLC
Initial release 12 May 2014 (2014-05-12)
Stable release 3.8.1.1870 / 26 January 2016 (2016-01-26)
Operating system Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, Linux
Available in English, German, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Swedish, Dutch, Hungarian, Finnish, Czech, Polish, Estonian, Russian, Korean, Japanese, Chinese traditional, Chinese simplified.
Type Download manager
License Freemium
Website www.4kdownload.com/products/product-videodownloader

4K Video's Downloader is a multi-platform software for downloading video and audio from popular websites like YouTube, Vimeo, Dailymotion or Facebook. It supports the following output formats: MP4, MKV, OGG Theora, MP3, M4A.[1]

Features

Supported sites:

Video quality options

Video formats:

Audio formats:


4K Video Downloader has been submitted to Steam GreenLight Community for voting and received around 1,500 votes.[4]

Tabs

  1. Choosing the level of intensity
  2. Choosing Speed limit
  3. Adding the numeration to file names in playlists
  4. Generating .m3u file for downloaded playlists
  5. Adding the downloaded videos and audios directly to iTunes
  6. Skipping duplicates in playlist
  7. Adding embed subtitles in video if possible
  8. Searching audio tags on the basis of track title
  9. Playing sound when download is completed
  10. Changing proxy to download blocked videos

Development

4K Video Downloader was originally developed in the programming language C++ with QT framework using such libraries as Boost, FFmpeg, OpenCV, OpenSSL, LAME, and PortAudio.

Price

Contrary to the official 4K Downloader website, all of the products are free - no need for registration or payment. Every person that has downloaded 4K Video Downloader may get to their computer any sole public videos, playlists consisting of up to 25 videos from all the supported by program sites. However, any user may buy a lifetime lasting licence key that allows downloading massive playlist, whole channels and subtitles.

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, February 10, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.