Well, for me the big deal is that it can also convert videos that are ON YouTube. So lots of converters do similar things to Evom. You also have the option to simply save the file to a folder anywhere on your computer. It’ll even take care of the uploading part (supply your YouTube credentials). You can also prepare videos for an Apple TV (and therefore iPad), or for uploading to YouTube. You drag a file from your hard drive into the interface and you get asked which device you want to prepare the file for.Ĭhoosing the iTunes or iPod buttons gives you the option convert the video, or to ditch the video and just save as an MP3 audio file, so it’s handy for ripping audio from video files. The beauty of the program is the ease in which it gets video into the right configuration for Apple devices. It converts many types of videos, and uses the ffmpeg engine to perform its magic.
If it were on the PC it could be the one program I would recommend to do a myriad of tasks.Įvom comes from a company called Little App Factory, makers of the Mac DVD ripping software RipIt! I don’t know where the name Evom came from, but the program works great. While perusing my RSS feed today, Lifehacker reminded me about Evom, a Mac only (sorry) video converter that is super slick and easy. I’m also still grinding gears from vacation last week, but despite those issues, I’m very excited about 2010/11 at UMW. I’m still shaking my head about where the summer went.