An opinionated list of Python frameworks, libraries, tools, and resources
Originally published at ffmpeg-micro.com You need a thumbnail from a video file. Maybe you're building a video gallery, generating preview images for a CMS, or creating social media cards from uploaded content. The usual advice is to install FFmpeg on your server and write extraction scripts. That works until you need it in production. FFmpeg can extract a single frame from any video using two fla
In August 2025, a user reported that Apache Kafka v3.9.0 dropped consumer throughput by 10x. Other users reproduced it. The culprit was a configuration called min.insync.replicas, and the fix was three lines of code. Sharad Garg opened a ticket titled "Consumer throughput drops by 10 times with Kafka v3.9.0 in ZK mode." Ritvik Gupta ran controlled tests and traced the issue to min.insync.replicas.
Originally published at ffmpeg-micro.com Zapier doesn't support FFmpeg. You can't install binaries, run shell commands, or execute video processing natively in a Zap. If you've tried, you've probably hit the same wall everyone else does. But Zapier can make HTTP requests. And that's all you need. By calling FFmpeg Micro's REST API from a Zapier webhook action, you can transcode, compress, convert,
If you've ever tried to download a video from Reddit, you've probably ended up with a silent MP4 file. No audio. No error. Just a video that should have sound but doesn't. This isn't a bug in your downloader. It's how Reddit stores videos. Most video platforms (YouTube, Twitter, etc.) serve videos as a single muxed file — video and audio combined in one stream. Easy to download, plays anywhere. Re