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Batch file to run command on joining video files?


Question

I have a lot of movies that are 2 files and I want to join them into one file using Avidemux. Right now I've written a batch script to make it a little faster to join the 2 files like I put below. I have to update the "moviefinal" value, save the files, then run it. I have to do this each time with each movie though.

---------------------------

set avidexmuxprog="C:\Programs\avidemux\avidemux.exe"

set moviefinal=The 40 Year Old Virgin

set moviefile1=%moviefinal% - CD1

set moviefile2=%moviefinal% - CD2

%avidexmuxprog% --load "T:\Video\Movies\%moviefile1%.avi" --append "T:\Video\Movies\%moviefile2%.avi" --force-smart --save "C:\_COMBINED_AVI\%moviefinal%.avi" --quit

:end

---------------------------

I've tried putting this into a "for" loop, but the (set) doesn't like spaces in the names and using quotes messes it up too.

---------------------------

set avidexmuxprog="C:\Programs\avidemux\avidemux.exe"

set movie1="The Figher"

set movie2="The Fifth Element"

FOR /f "delims=," %%G IN (%movie1%,%movie2%) DO (%avidexmuxprog% --load "c:\test\%%G - CD1.avi" --append "c:\test\%%G - CD2.avi" --force-smart --save "c:\test\final\%%G.avi" --quit)

:end

---------------------------

Is there a way, in batch to have it automatically detect a file with the same name, but with the CD1/CD2 and then run the command for each file set that it finds in a directory?

I'm not too advanced in batch, but hoping there's a way to automate the entire process so I don't have to keep manually typing in the name.

24 answers to this question

Recommended Posts

  • 0

I looked into that program and it doesn't provide any better options than that of Avidemux. I still have to manually join the files.

I have about 100 or more movies that are (movie-Cd1.avi and movie-Cd2.avi) and want to join them into one file. Avidemux works very well, but have to manually choose 2 files to join, then rinse and repeat 100+ times.

  • 0

While it is certainly possible to do what you want in Batch, its really a pain. I recommend that you use a more suitable scripting language, of which there are many.

For example, I wrote a new version of your script in Perl that does what you requested. It is much nicer than its equivalent in Batch, and took me only a couple of minutes to write and test. All you should need to do is modify the @MOVIES_TO_CONVERT variable to list the movies you need to convert. Also, you can download ActivePerl for Windows if you don't already have Perl installed on your system.


#!/usr/bin/perl

use strict;

# Array of movies to convert
my @MOVIES_TO_CONVERT = ('The Figher', 'The Fifth Element', 'Robinhood Men In Tights');

# Directory where the split AVI files are stored
my $MOVIE_IN_PATH = 'T:\Video\Movies';

# Directory where the combined AVI files will be stored
my $MOVIE_OUT_PATH = 'C:\_COMBINED_AVI';

# Full path to the avidemux executable
my $AVIDEMUX = 'C:\Programs\avidemux\avidemux.exe';

for my $movie (@MOVIES_TO_CONVERT)
{
my $convert_cmd = "\"$AVIDEMUX\" --load \"$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$movie - CD1.avi\" --append \"$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$movie - CD2.avi\" --force-smart --save \"$MOVIE_OUT_PATH\\$movie.avi\" --quit";
print "$convert_cmd\n";
die "Unable to convert $movie!\n" if (system "$convert_cmd");
}
[/CODE]

If you save the script as [i]avijoin.pl[/i], or something else with the [i].pl[/i] file extension, ActivePerl should let you double-click to run it.

  • 0

That's awesome orangekiller. I've always wanted to mess with perl more and played with it a little in Debian before. This also gives me good examples to learn from. I'll get Active Perl and try it out since I'm in Windows.

  • 0

Another question for you Orange, what would this look like as a VBS script? Do you know VBS? Just looking for something else to learn from since I'm in a Windows environment and wanted to start messing with VBS instead of batch. I learn best from understand code in scripts that I'm actually trying to use in real life instead of a test book.

I'm installing ActivePerl now and trying out that script on 2 movies.

  • 0
  On 30/12/2012 at 18:19, nicedreams said:

Another question for you Orange, what would this look like as a VBS script? Do you know VBS? Just looking for something else to learn from since I'm in a Windows environment and wanted to start messing with VBS instead of batch. I learn best from understand code in scripts that I'm actually trying to use in real life instead of a test book.

I'm installing ActivePerl now and trying out that script on 2 movies.

Personally I prefer Perl because of its easy syntax and excellent cross-platform support. While I do know a little VBS, I generally try to avoid it. The best Windows-specific scripting language is AutoIt, in my opinion. It has excellent documentation, a great community, a featureful standard library, built-in WIN32 API integration, and any AutoIt script may be "compiled" to an executable so that it can be run on systems that don't have AutoIt installed.

If you are just getting started with these languages, I have a couple of book recommendations for you. Learning To Script with AutoIt V3 is an excellent AutoIt tutorial, probably the best available. Whether you are a novice or expert, that is the tutorial to read when you are first starting with AutoIt. If you are fairly new to programming in general, not just learning a new language, I definitely recommend that you read Beginning Perl. It is an excellent introduction to programming, and covers programming basics, good practices, and the Perl language all-in-one. (Disclosure: Since I am a competent C/C++ developer, I only skimmed the book, but read Perl for C Programmers when I learned Perl.)

  • 0
  On 30/12/2012 at 17:25, nicedreams said:

I looked into that program and it doesn't provide any better options than that of Avidemux. I still have to manually join the files.

I have about 100 or more movies that are (movie-Cd1.avi and movie-Cd2.avi) and want to join them into one file. Avidemux works very well, but have to manually choose 2 files to join, then rinse and repeat 100+ times.

Ohhh, yeah I see what you mean. That would take awhile alright.

Years ago before I found out about Ultra Video Joiner, I just never downloaded anything that was in more than one part, meaning I didn't get the best quality files.

After I got the program, I downloaded everything and joined them right away. Most were 2 parts, but some 3 and 4. Mostly porn to be honest, lol. : )

  • 0

I should have joined these files a long time ago. Was lazy because XBMC detects them and plays 2 files together just fine as long as they are like CD1 and CD2 and so on.

Wanted to get more extensive and use a new media manager and looks like I have to change how I format all my movies, but combining them and putting each movie into a sub folder. The media program does this all for me, but doesn't like more than one file for a movie. Was using Ember Media Manager-R, but now going full blown with Media Center Master since EMM/EMM-R isn't being updated really anymore. After playing with Media Center Master, it just seems like a smarter move anyways.

Funny how things work, been trying to do this script and now playing with perl and in the past hour I've been playing with PowerShell which is way cooler than I thought it was at first and found out it's replacing VBS pretty much.

I'm going to play with AutoIT more also. Thanks again Orange.

  • 0

I improved the Perl script I posted above. This version is capable of detecting unconverted movies in the input directory and joining them automatically. If you still want to manually control which movies get converted, you can assign their names to the @MOVIES_TO_CONVERT array like before, and the script will use those instead of auto-detection. (Remove the '; #' after the @MOVIES_TO_CONVERT and use the comment as reference if you want manual control.)


#!/usr/bin/perl

use strict;

########################################################################
# Configuration Details #
########################################################################

# Array of movies to convert
my @MOVIES_TO_CONVERT; # = ('The Figher', 'The Fifth Element');

# Directory where the split AVI files are stored
my $MOVIE_IN_PATH = 'T:\Video\Movies';

# Directory where the combined AVI files will be stored
my $MOVIE_OUT_PATH = 'C:\_COMBINED_AVI';

# Full path to the avidemux executable
my $AVIDEMUX = 'C:\Programs\avidemux\avidemux.exe';

########################################################################
# Functions #
########################################################################

# Return an array of all the AVI files in the specified directory.
sub get_avis_in_directory
{
my $dh; # Directory handle
my $dir; # Current directory
my @avis; # Array of file names to return

opendir ($dh, $dir = shift) or die "Failed to open directory $dir: $!\n";
while (readdir $dh)
{
next if (/^\.{1,2}/);
$_ = $dir . "\\" . $_;
push (@avis, $_) if (-f $_ and /.*\.avi$/i);
}
closedir $dh;

return (@avis);
}

########################################################################
# Entry Point #
########################################################################

die "Input directory $MOVIE_IN_PATH does not exist!\n" unless (-d $MOVIE_IN_PATH);
die "Output directory $MOVIE_OUT_PATH does not exist!\n" unless (-d $MOVIE_OUT_PATH);

# This variable represents the actual names and paths of movies to be converted.
# It will either be built from the files specified in @MOVIES_TO_CONVERT manually, or
# built dynamically based on the files in the source and destination paths.
my @movies_formatted; # Array of hashes of movies to convert

if ($#MOVIES_TO_CONVERT == -1)
{
my @in_avis; # Array of AVI files in the input directory
my @out_avis; # Array of AVI files in the ouput directory

@in_avis = get_avis_in_directory ($MOVIE_IN_PATH);
@out_avis = get_avis_in_directory ($MOVIE_OUT_PATH);

for my $in_avi (@in_avis)
{
if ($in_avi =~ /.*-[ ]*CD[ ]*1\.avi$/i)
{
my $rec; # Temporary hash variable
my $name; # Name of the move we are processing
$name = (split (/[ ]*-[ ]*CD[ ]*1/i, $in_avi))[0];
$name = (split (/$MOVIE_IN_PATH[\\\/]{1}/i, $name))[1];

for my $in_avi_2 (@in_avis)
{
if ($in_avi_2 =~ /^$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$name[ ]*-[ ]*CD[ ]*2\.avi$/i)
{
$rec->{'part2'} = $in_avi_2;
last;
}
}

if (defined $rec->{'part2'})
{
for my $out_avi (@out_avis)
{
if ($out_avi =~ /$name\.avi$/i)
{
$rec->{'output'} = $out_avi;
last;
}
}

unless (defined $rec->{'output'})
{
$rec->{'part1'} = $in_avi;
$rec->{'output'} = "$MOVIE_OUT_PATH\\$name.avi";
push (@movies_formatted, $rec);
}
}
}
}
}
else
{
my $rec; # Temporary hash variable

for my $name (@MOVIES_TO_CONVERT)
{
$rec = {};
$rec->{'part1'} = "$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$name - CD1.avi";
$rec->{'part2'} = "$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$name - CD2.avi";
$rec->{'output'} = "$MOVIE_OUT_PATH\\$name.avi";
push (@movies_formatted, $rec);
}
}

for my $movie (@movies_formatted)
{
my $convert_cmd = "\"$AVIDEMUX\" --load \"" . $movie->{'part1'} . "\" --append \"" . $movie->{'part2'} . "\" --force-smart --save \"" . $movie->{'output'} . "\" --quit";
print "$convert_cmd\n";
die "Unable to convert $movie!\n" if (system "$convert_cmd");
}
[/CODE]

[b]Edit:[/b] If you copy/paste the code into a descent text editor with a monospaced font, such as Notepad++, it should look nicer.

  • 0
  On 30/12/2012 at 19:27, nicedreams said:

Funny how things work, been trying to do this script and now playing with perl and in the past hour I've been playing with PowerShell which is way cooler than I thought it was at first and found out it's replacing VBS pretty much.

I'm going to play with AutoIT more also. Thanks again Orange.

I agree that PowerShell is really neat. Its definitely an improvement over both Batch and VBS, but it still pales in comparison to BASH in my opinion. I definitely have to give Microsoft credit for getting it so close to right. PowerShell is the most usable shell/scripting language I have used that Microsoft produced. If you are interested in learning more about it, I definitely recommend the book Windows PowerShell in Action. It was authored by one of the PowerShell core developers and explains the influences and reasoning behind many of their design choices. Not only does it teach PowerShell well, but it helped me to understand the PowerShell mentality more than any of the other PowerShell resources I read.

When it comes to AutoIt, on the one hand I almost wish Microsoft would officially adopt it as their VBS replacement, and on the other hand I'm glad they haven't. AutoIt feels very much like a VBS replacement. Its syntax is similar, yet the language is more powerful. It is simple to use and integrates with Windows very well. It smoothed the rough spots of VBS while polishing what made it great. All-around I think its an excellent language/platform. Although AutoIt would certainly get more support if Microsoft officially adopted it, I'm afraid that Microsoft would kill it. They have a nasty habit of promoting some new language or technology as the-best-thing-since-sliced-bread one year, then abandoning it never-to-be-mentioned-again the next. Therefore, while its not Microsoft's blessed scripting language for Windows, AutoIt is probably safer and more stable that way. I highly recommend it.

  • 0

Thanks again for the info. While looking at your perl code, it kind of helped me understand using batch a little more.

I took my original batch code with the FOR loop and put the names of the movies that are 2 files in a separate text file.

FOR /f "delims=|" %%G IN (filelist.txt) DO (%avidexmuxprog% --load "c:\test\%%G - CD1.avi" --append "c:\test\%%G - CD2.avi" --force-smart --save "c:\test\final\%%G.avi" --quit)

It's working so far, but have to manually enter all names. I haven't tested, but wondering if using | instead of , is why it's working now regardless of delims=, like I had before to separate the names.

I'm looking at that new perl script that is more automated and playing with that too. Learning so much and it's fun. lol

Even though now I have many options of getting this done, I'm trying to make the perl, batch, and powershell work for the hell of it.

  • 0
  On 30/12/2012 at 20:54, nicedreams said:

I'm looking at that new perl script that is more automated and playing with that too. Learning so much and it's fun. lol

Even though now I have many options of getting this done, I'm trying to make the perl, batch, and powershell work for the hell of it.

I'm glad that I was able to help. Automating the same task in different languages is an excellent way to learn the syntax, strengths, and weaknesses of each. The same basic algorithm that I used in the latter Perl script shouldn't be too difficult to implement in PowerShell. (Technically, you could try it in Batch too, but I'm not enough of a masochist to advocate that.)

  • 0

xorangekiller - I installed ActivePerl and set the file paths of the source, destination and Avidemux but when I run the films.pl file (where I have copied your script) a command window flashes up and ends up doing nothing :(

If it helps, I wrote a small hello word script (with the help of Google) and that outputs fine to the command line.

/Edit: On purpose I entered an invalid source and destination path and that does give me the following errors:


Input directory T:\Video\Movies does not exist!
Output directory C:\_COMBINED_AVI does not exist![/CODE]

But as soon as they are right, the script does nothing:

[CODE]
C:\>perl films.pl

C:\>[/CODE]

  • 0

I got it working by using a specified file list, and I think I know what was wrong. My films are named "Film CD 1.avi" etc and not "Film - CD1.avi".

What would I need to change these two lines to work with that format:


$name = (split (/[ ]*-[ ]*CD[ ]*1/i, $in_avi))[0];

if ($in_avi_2 =~ /^$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$name[ ]*-[ ]*CD[ ]*2\.avi$/i)
[/CODE]

  • 0
  On 13/01/2013 at 00:12, hshah said:

I got it working by using a specified file list, and I think I know what was wrong. My films are named "Film CD 1.avi" etc and not "Film - CD1.avi".

What would I need to change these two lines to work with that format:


$name = (split (/[ ]*-[ ]*CD[ ]*1/i, $in_avi))[0];

if ($in_avi_2 =~ /^$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$name[ ]*-[ ]*CD[ ]*2\.avi$/i)
[/CODE]

You are correct in suspecting the regular expressions as the reason the script is not working for you. I wrote it to expect the OP's naming scheme. Since your naming scheme is a little bit different, my script was not detecting anything to convert. The version below is modified to work under the your conditions; note the differences on lines 66, 70, and 75 in particular.

[CODE]
#!/usr/bin/perl

use strict;

########################################################################
# Configuration Details #
########################################################################

# Array of movies to convert
my @MOVIES_TO_CONVERT; # = ('The Figher', 'The Fifth Element');

# Directory where the split AVI files are stored
my $MOVIE_IN_PATH = 'T:\Video\Movies';

# Directory where the combined AVI files will be stored
my $MOVIE_OUT_PATH = 'C:\_COMBINED_AVI';

# Full path to the avidemux executable
my $AVIDEMUX = 'C:\Programs\avidemux\avidemux.exe';

########################################################################
# Functions #
########################################################################

# Return an array of all the AVI files in the specified directory.
sub get_avis_in_directory
{
my $dh; # Directory handle
my $dir; # Current directory
my @avis; # Array of file names to return

opendir ($dh, $dir = shift) or die "Failed to open directory $dir: $!\n";
while (readdir $dh)
{
next if (/^\.{1,2}/);
$_ = $dir . "\\" . $_;
push (@avis, $_) if (-f $_ and /.*\.avi$/i);
}
closedir $dh;

return (@avis);
}

########################################################################
# Entry Point #
########################################################################

die "Input directory $MOVIE_IN_PATH does not exist!\n" unless (-d $MOVIE_IN_PATH);
die "Output directory $MOVIE_OUT_PATH does not exist!\n" unless (-d $MOVIE_OUT_PATH);

# This variable represents the actual names and paths of movies to be converted.
# It will either be built from the files specified in @MOVIES_TO_CONVERT manually, or
# built dynamically based on the files in the source and destination paths.
my @movies_formatted; # Array of hashes of movies to convert

if ($#MOVIES_TO_CONVERT == -1)
{
my @in_avis; # Array of AVI files in the input directory
my @out_avis; # Array of AVI files in the ouput directory

@in_avis = get_avis_in_directory ($MOVIE_IN_PATH);
@out_avis = get_avis_in_directory ($MOVIE_OUT_PATH);

for my $in_avi (@in_avis)
{
if ($in_avi =~ /.*[ ]*CD[ ]*1\.avi$/i)
{
my $rec; # Temporary hash variable
my $name; # Name of the move we are processing
$name = (split (/[ ]*CD[ ]*1/i, $in_avi))[0];
$name = (split (/$MOVIE_IN_PATH[\\\/]{1}/i, $name))[1];

for my $in_avi_2 (@in_avis)
{
if ($in_avi_2 =~ /^$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$name[ ]*CD[ ]*2\.avi$/i)
{
$rec->{'part2'} = $in_avi_2;
last;
}
}

if (defined $rec->{'part2'})
{
for my $out_avi (@out_avis)
{
if ($out_avi =~ /$name\.avi$/i)
{
$rec->{'output'} = $out_avi;
last;
}
}

unless (defined $rec->{'output'})
{
$rec->{'part1'} = $in_avi;
$rec->{'output'} = "$MOVIE_OUT_PATH\\$name.avi";
push (@movies_formatted, $rec);
}
}
}
}
}
else
{
my $rec; # Temporary hash variable

for my $name (@MOVIES_TO_CONVERT)
{
$rec = {};
$rec->{'part1'} = "$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$name CD 1.avi";
$rec->{'part2'} = "$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$name CD 2.avi";
$rec->{'output'} = "$MOVIE_OUT_PATH\\$name.avi";
push (@movies_formatted, $rec);
}
}

for my $movie (@movies_formatted)
{
my $convert_cmd = "\"$AVIDEMUX\" --load \"" . $movie->{'part1'} . "\" --append \"" . $movie->{'part2'} . "\" --force-smart --save \"" . $movie->{'output'} . "\" --quit";
print "$convert_cmd\n";
die "Unable to convert $movie->{'output'}!\n" if (system "$convert_cmd");
}
[/CODE]

[b]Edit:[/b] Here is the diff between the OP's version of the script and yours. It should make the changes a little more obvious. (The spaces may be a little munged, kinda like the script above. I hate Neowin's code formatting.)

[CODE]
--- avijoin.pl 2013-01-12 20:15:57.468098458 -0500
+++ avijoin-nodash.pl 2013-01-12 20:31:27.336122407 -0500
@@ -63,16 +64,16 @@

for my $in_avi (@in_avis)
{
- if ($in_avi =~ /.*-[ ]*CD[ ]*1\.avi$/i)
+ if ($in_avi =~ /.*[ ]*CD[ ]*1\.avi$/i)
{
my $rec; # Temporary hash variable
my $name; # Name of the move we are processing
- $name = (split (/[ ]*-[ ]*CD[ ]*1/i, $in_avi))[0];
+ $name = (split (/[ ]*CD[ ]*1/i, $in_avi))[0];
$name = (split (/$MOVIE_IN_PATH[\\\/]{1}/i, $name))[1];

for my $in_avi_2 (@in_avis)
{
- if ($in_avi_2 =~ /^$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$name[ ]*-[ ]*CD[ ]*2\.avi$/i)
+ if ($in_avi_2 =~ /^$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$name[ ]*CD[ ]*2\.avi$/i)
{
$rec->{'part2'} = $in_avi_2;
last;
@@ -107,8 +108,8 @@
for my $name (@MOVIES_TO_CONVERT)
{
$rec = {};
- $rec->{'part1'} = "$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$name - CD1.avi";
- $rec->{'part2'} = "$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$name - CD2.avi";
+ $rec->{'part1'} = "$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$name CD 1.avi";
+ $rec->{'part2'} = "$MOVIE_IN_PATH\\$name CD 2.avi";
$rec->{'output'} = "$MOVIE_OUT_PATH\\$name.avi";
push (@movies_formatted, $rec);
}
[/CODE]

  • 0

Unfortunately the new script doesn't work. It gives the same result as before and my files are named in the format "Film CD 1.avi" etc.

The only difference this time is that there are some .mkv files in the same folder but if I am reading this script correctly, they would just be ignored?

/Edit: I added "use warnings;" to the top and it shows this error many times:


Use of uninitialized value $name in regexp compilation at films.pl line 76
[/CODE]

  • 0
  On 13/01/2013 at 17:06, hshah said:

Unfortunately the new script doesn't work. It gives the same result as before and my files are named in the format "Film CD 1.avi" etc.

The only difference this time is that there are some .mkv files in the same folder but if I am reading this script correctly, they would just be ignored?

/Edit: I added "use warnings;" to the top and it shows this error many times:


Use of uninitialized value $name in regexp compilation at films.pl line 76
[/CODE]

The MKV files should not interfere with the script. It is supposed to filter out everything but AVIs.

The warning you are getting about an uninitialized variable does suggest a cause. The split statement on line 72 is failing. The split statement on line 71, which is supposed to remove the "CD 1" text from the end of the video's name, could be failing as well, but since the $name variable is assigned from the first element of the resulting array, $name will always have a value, even if its wrong. Since the split statement on line 72, which is supposed to remove the leading path from the video's name, is using the second element of the resulting array, $name is not guaranteed to have a value, although a value is assumed by the script. You are getting a warning on line 76 because that is the first place the uninitialized variable is used. Theoretically the way the script is building the array of AVIs and parsing out the name should have made this situation impossible - at least that was my thinking - but apparently not. Your environment must have some condition that my tests did not cover.

If you have more specific questions, feel free to ask. If you discover a solution, post it. Hopefully that gives you enough information to debug your issue. Good luck.

  • 0
  On 13/01/2013 at 19:44, hshah said:

I posted the question here:

http://stackoverflow...me-not-matching

See the answer by Borodin, and the following comments. You might be able to help with that :)

Thanks! His answer was very helpful, and he is correct: I'm not a pro Perl programmer. I learned Perl about 4 months ago. I originally wrote this script in Perl because it was certainly easier than Batch, and the best way to learn a language is to practice it.

By the way, after all that: hshah, welcome to Neowin!

  • 0
  On 13/01/2013 at 20:55, xorangekiller said:

Thanks! His answer was very helpful, and he is correct: I'm not a pro Perl programmer. I learned Perl about 4 months ago. I originally wrote this script in Perl because it was certainly easier than Batch, and the best way to learn a language is to practice it.

By the way, after all that: hshah, welcome to Neowin!

Thanks for the welcome.

I hadn't noticed his edit (that code wasn't there before) and to be honest I'm not fussed whether your code is the best or not... it works and it has saved me hours of manual work. So the thanks still goes to you :)

  • 0

Hi,

 

wow, this is great.

 

Thanks a lot for your work, xorangekiller.

 

The only think, if i have one wish for free, is, to make it more flexible and simple.

 

For example, the script could parse through all files of a directory (i move all split avis in a separate directory) and whenever it finds two matching files it will join them.

So there is no need to fill the array @MOVIES_TO_CONVERT

 

A second wish is, that the naming convention is mor flexible.

Sometimes the naming of the file is *-cd1.avi / *-cd2.avi, sometimes it's *cd1 or cda or just a and b.

 

 

But anyhow, this is great

 

 

spline

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    • I have it as an icon in the Start Menu. Close enough for when I need it.
    • Windows 11 Pro with a copy of Office 2021 Pro drops to all-time low price by Steven Parker Today's highlighted deal comes via our Apps + Software section of the Neowin Deals store, where you can save 86% on Windows 11 Pro (for 2 devices) + Microsoft Office Pro 2021. Upgrade your computing experience with Windows 11 Pro. This cutting-edge operating system boasts a sleek new design and advanced tools to help you work faster and smarter. From creative projects to gaming and beyond, Windows 11 delivers the power and flexibility you need to achieve your goals. With a focus on productivity, the new features are easy to learn and use, enhancing your workflow and efficiency. Whether you're a student, professional, gamer, or creative, Windows 11 Home has everything you need to take your productivity to the next level. New interface. easier on the eyes & easier to use Biometrics login*.Encrypted authentication & advanced antivirus defenses DirectX 12 Ultimate. Play the latest games with graphics that rival reality. DirectX 12 Ultimate comes ready to maximize your hardware* Screen space. Snap layouts, desktops & seamless redocking Widgets. Stay up-to-date with the content you love & the new you care about Microsoft Teams. Stay in touch with friends and family with Microsoft Teams, which can be seamlessly integrated into your taskbar** Wake & lock. Automatically wake up when you approach and lock when you leave Smart App Control. Provides a layer of security by only permitting apps with good reputations to be installed Windows Studio Effects. Designed with Background Blur, Eye Contact, Voice Focus, & Automatic Framing Touchscreen. For a true mouse-less or keyboard-less experience TPM 2.0. Helps prevent unwanted tampering Windows 11 Pro also includes a number of productivity-focused features, such as the ability to snap multiple windows together and create custom layouts, improved voice typing, and a new, more powerful search experience. Personal and professional users will enjoy a modern and secure computing experience, with improved performance and productivity features to help users get more done. Only on Windows 11 Pro If you require enterprise-oriented features for your daily professional tasks, then Windows 11 Pro is a better option. Set up with a local account (only when set up for work or school) Join Active Directory/Azure AD Hyper-V Windows Sandbox Microsoft Remote Desktop BitLocker device encryption Windows Information Protection Mobile device management (MDM) Group Policy Enterprise State Roaming with Azure Assigned Access Dynamic Provisioning Windows Update for Business Kiosk mode Maximum RAM: 2TB Maximum no. of CPUs: 2 Maximum no. of CPU cores: 128 Good to know: Length of access: lifetime Redemption deadline: redeem your code within 30 days of purchase Access options: desktop Max number of device(s): 2 (Use one activation key for up to 2 devices) Version: Windows 11 Pro Updates included Click here to verify Microsoft partnership For Windows 10 or Newer! Get All Essential Microsoft Apps for Your PC with This One-Time Purchase This is intended for families and small businesses who want classic Office apps and email. It includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams, and OneNote. A one-time purchase installed on 1 Windows PC for use at home or work. Lifetime license for MS Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams, & OneNote One-time purchase installed on 1 Windows PC for use at home or work Instant Delivery & Download – access your software license keys and download links instantly Free customer service – only the best support! Microsoft Office Professional 2021 (for Windows) includes: Microsoft Office Word Microsoft Office Excel Microsoft Office PowerPoint Microsoft Office Outlook Microsoft Office Teams Microsoft Office OneNote Microsoft Office Publisher Microsoft Office Access Good to know: ONE-TIME PURCHASE INSTALLED ON 1 DEVICE Redemption deadline: redeem your code within 30 days of purchase Access options: desktop Full versions No subscriptions – no monthly/annual fees Version: 2021 Updates included Here's the deal: This Microsoft Office Pro 2021 + Windows 11 Pro normally costs $438, but this deal can be yours from just $54.97, that's a saving of $383. For full terms, specifications, and license info please click the link below. Use MSO5 when checking out for additional $5 off. Coupon Expires June 29. Get Microsoft Office Pro 2021 + Windows 11 Pro for just $49.97, or learn more Although priced in U.S. dollars, this deal is available for digital purchase worldwide. We post these because we earn commission on each sale so as not to rely solely on advertising, which many of our readers block. It all helps toward paying staff reporters, servers and hosting costs. Other ways to support Neowin Whitelist Neowin by not blocking our ads Create a free member account to see fewer ads Make a donation to support our day to day running costs Subscribe to Neowin - for $14 a year, or $28 a year for an ad-free experience Disclosure: Neowin benefits from revenue of each sale made through our branded deals site powered by StackCommerce.
    • I'm not a fan of the HP "Smart" app either, but it does work. I just wish I didn't have to log in to use it. HP Color LaserJet Pro MFP 4301
    • FocusOn Image Viewer 1.32 by Razvan Serea FocusOn Image Viewer is a fast, lightweight, and user-friendly photo viewer for Windows. It supports various image formats, offers basic editing tools, EXIF data display, and batch renaming. With a clean interface, slideshow mode, and easy navigation, it’s ideal for quickly viewing and organizing photos without unnecessary complexity or system resource usage. FocusOn Image Viewer key features: Auto Organize: Automatically sorts photos by date using your chosen template. Explorer View: Browse and manage images with thumbnails; includes basic edits like resize and rotate. Photo Editing: Crop, apply filters, correct colors, add borders or text. Non-Destructive Edits: Original images remain untouched. Photo Sharing: Post directly to blogs, Twitter, and Facebook. Email Support: Send selected images via email. Print Options: Print to fit paper size, preserve aspect ratio, or fit multiple images per page. Slideshow: View selected photos in a slideshow. EXIF Tools: View or remove EXIF data. Scanning: Import from TWAIN or WIA-compatible scanners. Set as Background: Quickly set any image as desktop wallpaper. Batch Rename: Rename images in bulk using templates. Resize Images: Resize with optimized or custom resampling methods, including multi-step resizing. Thumbnail Sizes: Choose from thumbnail sizes between 32–256 pixels. Format Support: Compatible with over 100 image formats. FocusOn Image Viewer 1.32 changelog: Added Ghostscript(AI, PDF) DPI option Fixed transparency issue when saving PDF document as image Other improvements and bug fixes Download: FocusOn Image Viewer 64-bit | Portable 64-bit | ~7.0 MB (Freeware) Download: FocusOn Image Viewer 32-bit | Portable 32-bit View: FocusOn Image Viewer Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Wall cabinet: Fiber connection (1Gbps) Patch panel 2.5Gbps Router A mini PC with Ryzen 5800H CPU and 32GB DDR4 RAM, for network related tools (Portainer, Pi-Hole, Cloudflared, Tailscale, Uptime Kuma, Wetty) A headless server running Proxmox: AMD Ryzen 9 9950X CPU, 96GB DDR5, RTX 3090 24GB GPU, 10Gbps NIC, and a bunch of NVMs, SATA SSDs, HDDs A VM with TrueNAS for backups and media server via Jellyfin, passing through the SATA storage controller A VM with an Ubuntu server acting as a web and a GPU server for AI workloads, and a TeamCity build/deploy agent for my personal projects This setup has evolved many times for the last 2 years, I have not gone completely crazy, yet (I think), but still experimenting, still learning, it is a fun and rewarding experience having a home lab!
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