When I kept using it, the motherboard finally deformed due to heat, and the HDD also deformed and broke. The Ultra-thin “Ultrabook” became unrepairable and was disposed of.Īt that time, what I used regularly on my PC was “Office” and “Adobe Photoshop Lightroom”, but the “Photoshop Lightroom” program demanded a very high load (RAM, CPU). The program cannot batch convert files, and considering the resource usage, that's probably a good thanks for the very useful postscript and the specific (Thermalright TF8) information.Īctually, this is my actual experience. I'd say you will need a powerful CPU to use Tricycle. Naturally being taxed to the limits, the processor temperature shot up significantly, though not close to extreme levels. Tricycle is very heavy on resources, it reached a maximum of 95% CPU usage, and about 750MB of RAM during my tests (1080p video conversion). You should decide if the higher quality is worth the larger file size, if you're a data hoarder you may want to stick with the "better" quality, though I think "good" to be perfectly acceptable. The program converted a 691MB 1080p video to 281MB (Good), 355MB (better) and 445MB (best). The only differences between those are the data rate and bit rate. Coming to the quality, aka good, better, and best. Tricycle is compatible with computers running on Windows 7 and above, and macOS 10.3 or later. Wait until the Transcode Complete window pops-up. The status bar at the bottom of the screen shows you the progress of the conversion task. The conversion takes some time depending on the size and quality of the source media, and on the settings that you chose. It relies on FFmpeg for the encoding process. If you're happy with the settings, click the play button, and Tricycle will begin converting the video. Hit the monitor icon near the top left corner of the window to preview some scenes (still images) from the video.
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