We don't have any immediate plans to localize the app. You should not have the editor view open in multiple instances though, as changing the quality, for example, will change it in all the instances.
However, if you know how to run a terminal command, you could run open -na Gifski multiple times to open multiple instances of Gifski, where each instance can convert a separate video. How can I run multiple conversions at the same time? TMPFILE="$(mktemp /tmp/XXXXXXXXXXX).mov" \įfmpeg -f image2 -framerate 30 -i image_%06d.png -c:v prores_ks -profile:v 5 "$TMPFILE" \Įnsure the images are named in the format image_000001.png and adjust the -framerate accordingly.Ĭommand explanation.
1.1 Previous requirements 1.2 Install Gifski. To build the app in Xcode, you need to have Rust installed first: Gifski also requires us to have ffmpeg to convert video to PNG images.
Hold the Option key meanwhile to change it by 10. In the width/height input fields in the editor view, press the arrow up/down keys to change the value by 1. Tips Quickly copy or save the GIFĪfter converting, press Command+C to copy the GIF or Command+S to save it. gifski -fps 10 -width 320 -o anim.gif video. Usage The CLI version must be run from a command line (terminal). You can also get it with cargo install gifski if you have Rust installed. This option doubles the number of frames in the GIF so the file size will double as well. Download CLI For Windows and Debian download the latest CLI version. This is a similar effect to the bounce effect in iOS's Live Photo effects. Gifski includes the option to create GIFs that bounce back and forth between forward and backward playback. Gifski includes a system service that lets you quickly convert a video to GIF from the Services menu in any app that provides a compatible video file. Tip: You can share a macOS screen recording with Gifski by clicking on the thumbnail that pops up once you are done recording and selecting “Share” from there. Just select Gifski from the Share menu of any macOS app. Gifski includes a share extension that lets you share videos to Gifski.
You can also produce smaller lower quality GIFs when needed with the “Quality” slider, thanks to gifsicle. It produces animated GIFs that use thousands of colors per frame and up to 50 FPS (useful for showing off design work on Dribbble). This is a macOS app for the gifski encoder, which converts videos to GIF animations using pngquant's fancy features for efficient cross-frame palettes and temporal dithering.
Convert videos to high-quality GIFs on your Mac