I’m not sure what you mean by “p]:inline” data-streamdown=“list-item”>“. Assuming you want details about the title “How to Use ConvertZ to Convert Video, Audio, and Documents,” here’s a concise guide:
How to Use ConvertZ to Convert Video, Audio, and Documents
1. Supported formats
- Videos: MP4, MKV, AVI, MOV, WMV, FLV
- Audio: MP3, WAV, AAC, FLAC, OGG
- Documents: PDF, DOCX, TXT, PPTX, XLSX
2. Basic workflow
- Open ConvertZ (web app or desktop).
- Click “Add files” or drag-and-drop the files you want to convert.
- Choose the output format (select preset for device or custom settings).
- Adjust optional settings (resolution, bitrate, codec, sample rate, page size, OCR).
- Select output folder.
- Click “Convert” and wait for the process to finish.
- Review converted files and run a quick quality check.
3. Video-specific tips
- Use H.264 or H.265 for best compression/quality balance.
- Reduce resolution for smaller file sizes (e.g., 1080p → 720p).
- Lower bitrate if uploading to web; increase for archiving.
- Enable hardware acceleration if available to speed up conversion.
4. Audio-specific tips
- Choose 320 kbps MP3 or FLAC for high-quality audio.
- Normalize volume or apply fade in/out when needed.
- Convert sample rate to 44.1 kHz for music, 48 kHz for video.
5. Document-specific tips
- For scanned PDFs, enable OCR to make text selectable/searchable.
- Choose PDF/A for long-term archiving.
- Reduce image quality to shrink file size for sharing.
- Preserve metadata when required.
6. Batch processing & automation
- Use batch mode to convert many files with the same settings.
- Save presets for repeated tasks.
- Schedule or script conversions if ConvertZ supports CLI or API.
7. Troubleshooting
- Corrupt inputs: try re-downloading or repairing source files.
- Conversion fails: update ConvertZ, check codecs, enable logs for errors.
- Quality loss: choose higher bitrate/resolution or different codec.
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