
Mouse over the timeline to get a preview of the frame to pop-up, you can use this to decide the start and end positions. The vertical line on the timeline bar indicates the current position of the playback. The video should begin playing in the video pane, and you can pause it anytime you want to by hitting space or using the mouse. SimpleVideoCutter supports the following video formats: MOV, AVI, MP4, WMV, RM and MPG. Open a file that you want to edit to start the cutting process. Once you have downloaded it, select the path to the FFmpeg.exe in the settings video of the video editor program. I used the Windows 64-bit Static version. SimpleVideoCutter requires FFmpeg (also open source) to be installed, for converting video files. A status bar is visible on the bottom of the window that displays the volume level and file selection status.

The small panel at the bottom of the video pane is the timeline graph that you can use to view frames. The program's GUI consists of a menubar at the top, a side-panel to the left with editing tools, and a video preview pane. Just download the latest version from the project's GitHub website and extract the archive to a directory of your choice.
