Convert your videos to various different formats for usage on mobile devices.
aTube Catcher is a fully functional media conversion tool which can convert your downloaded video files to many different formats included audio-only or different video formats.
aTube Catcher can convert video files to AVI (XviD, DivX), WMV, 3GP, MPEG, MPEG2 or GIF. Among the audio formats which aTube Converter transcodes to are FLAC, WAV, MP4, WMA, OGG files and more.
Some other features with this download are turbo-charged download speeds of up to 600% that of typical downloads. With the StreamCatcher mode, you can also grab and save any type of online video or audio source to the format of your choosing.
aTube Catcher includes an online video search engine and can locate oodles of different types of video files. With the help of Hotspot Shield for Canadians, access to Hulu and other U.S.-American web sites and saving them to disk is a cinch when these two programs are combined.
As mentioned above, as a full media converter, aTube Catcher can convert files you've captured with the StreamCatcher to many different video and audio formats with full configurability and customization for bitrates, aspect ratios and more. This is quite handy if you want to transfer your audio and video files to portable devices like the iPhone, iPad, Android and Windows phones (like Samsung, LG, Nokia, Motorola and more).
For those that love free software, you can rest assured that aTube Catcher is a fully freeware application and free to download without any nags.
Compatibility and License
aTube Catcher is a freeware, but ad-supported application available on Windows from media converter software. You may encounter different types of ads or offers when running and installing this program. Though ads might be present, download and installation of this PC software is free and 10.8.9 is the latest version last time we checked.
What version of Windows can aTube Catcher run on?
aTube Catcher can be used on a computer running Windows 11 or Windows 10. Previous versions of the OS shouldn't be a problem with Windows 8 and Windows 7 having been tested. It comes in both 32-bit and 64-bit downloads.
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