Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
youtube-dl is a free and open source software tool for downloading video and audio from YouTube [2] and over 1,000 other video hosting websites. [3] It is released under the Unlicense software license. [4] As of September 2021, youtube-dl is one of the most starred projects on GitHub, with over 100,000 stars. [5] Numerous forks of the project ...
youtube-dl <url> Path of the output can be specified as: (file name to be included in the path) youtube-dl -o <path> <url> To see list of all available file formats and sizes: youtube-dl -F <url> The video can be downloaded by selecting the format code from the list or typing the format manually: youtube-dl -f <format/code> <url>
Website. www.freedownloadmanager.org. Free Download Manager is a download manager for Windows, macOS, Linux and Android. [4][5] Free Download Manager is proprietary software, but was free and open-source software between versions 2.5 [6] and 3.9.7. Starting with version 3.0.852 (15 April 2010), the source code was made available in the project ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate; Help; Learn to edit; Community portal; Recent changes; Upload file
License. GNU GPLv3 (but partly closed-source [2]) Website. www.jdownloader.org. JDownloader is a download manager, written in Java, which allows automatic download of groups of files from one-click hosting sites. JDownloader supports the use of premium accounts. [3] Some parts of the code are open-source. As a popular software tool used in ...
ClipGrab is published as free software under the GPL-3.0-or-later license [9] Unusually for an open source project, file checksums, code repositories, developer documentation, or online issue trackers are not publicly available. Until 2015, ClipGrab published an online source code repository including a GPL open source license.
VP9 is the last official iteration of the TrueMotion series of video formats that Google bought in 2010 for $134 million together with the company On2 Technologies that created it. The development of VP9 started in the second half of 2011 under the development names of Next Gen Open Video (NGOV) and VP-Next. [8][9][10] The design goals for VP9 ...
The public-domain "free sharing" and donationware commercialization models evolved in the following years to the (non-voluntary) shareware model, [11] [12] and software free of charge, called freeware. [13] Additionally, due to other changes in the computer industry, the sharing of source code became less common. [6]