 Hi guys, welcome back to my YouTube channel. This is Daniel Rosal here. I want to show today a sort of workaround for if you're trying to sort through a bunch of video clips on a bunch of Linux and you have some video clips in a folder that are gonna be 4K. You're gonna have others that are going to be 1080p or 720, whatever the case may be, different resolutions. So this is something I encounter pretty commonly. I've just gone ahead and shot a bunch of video clips now for this YouTube channel. Now some of them, the majority of my clips I shoot in 1080p and then there are some clips that I shoot in 4K. And usually I want to keep those two sets of clips separate. So this is PCman FM, which is the default file manager in LXDE, which is the desktop environment I use. And I'm just gonna go ahead and create a folder and I'm gonna call it 4K now. The thing is using PCman FM, I can't really tell what resolution the files are just by looking at them, right? I have size, modify, this is what I choose to show. I can turn on some other things, but they don't really help me out. I can look at one of the clips and try to judge if this looks like 4K or 1080p, but that's not really a very effective way to do it. Now, if I click on properties, in PCman FM, I still don't get the resolution, right? I get the file size, modification, none of this info really helps me. So I digged around a bit, asked on Reddit if there's any ideas for this. And someone did recommend using Dolphin instead of PCman FM. So here is Dolphin. Here's the exact same media folder open. I've just, you can see the 4K folder I've created, but look at what we have in Dolphin. If I click onto this clip, for instance, we can see here 1920 by 1080. Now, there are command line interfaces, one of them is called media info. I personally wanted something visual. Now, unfortunately, there isn't a way I found so far on Dolphin to have a field for the video. So if I just show you what you can have for video, you can put on aspect ratio and frame rate. Unfortunately, it doesn't detect them for the videos, but if I click again onto four, you can see width and height. So 1920 by 1080 pixels is 1080p and some of these clips are going to be 4K. So the best solution I've found so far for a kind of visually friendly way to go through this process is just to flick through the clips in this manner. Now, I realize this is a really dumb way to do it, but you can see everything I've seen so far is 1080p, 1080, 1080, 1080. In fact, what I'll do is I'll just open the 4K folder in a new tab. You're up to what, about like 16 or something like that. 1080, 1080, 1080, 1080, 1080, 1080, 1080, et cetera. Here we go. And you can see now I've got width 3840 by 2160. Now, again, unfortunately, if there was a way to filter on the video, if there was an option here for width and height video, this would make this process really simple because they could just sort on the width and height and just quickly siphon off the 1080p ones. Well, let's just go back here, doing it the dumb way here. We can see this is a 4K clip, so I'm just gonna drop that one into the 4K folder and so on and so forth. I could obviously do a, here's another one, et cetera now. I realize this is like an unideal and manually way to do it, but given that 90% of the time I don't shoot in 4K, I'm usually just trying to identify what clips are 4K. So again, I'm just gonna move these guys over here and so on and so forth. So that's the best system, unfortunately, I found today, but it's better than no system. If you know of a better way and a bunch of file manager that will allow you to easily filter clips according to the video clips, according to the resolution, please drop me a comment and I'd be glad to make another video showing some better way to do this process. Thank you guys for watching.