

I’ll be downloading a copy of the rather shlocky 1971 sci-fi film “Earth II”, as you can see. The page URL should be something like as you can see in the below: The first step might seem an obvious one, but go to YouTube and navigate to the page for the video you want to save.

Now let’s get on with this! IDENTIFY THE URL OF THE YOUTUBE VIDEO To start, then, go ahead and install VLC if you don’t already have it on your computer.īack? All installed? Excellent. The program’s great for playing any audio or video content you may encounter already, from MOV to AVI to MP4 to MKV and even OGG videos. It relies on the installation of a great open source program called VLC from. It’s also inefficient: If you have to stream it to capture it, why not just watch it while you’re streaming it? 🙂įortunately, there’s another solution and while the overall process is a bit fiddly, you can do it easily enough on a PC, Mac, or Linux system. You can, of course, video capture your computer screen while playing the video, then save that capture to produce the result you want, but that’s tedious and typically produces enormous files, way bigger than the source material. There are also copyright issues: Some companies and organizations undoubtedly share content on YouTube without ever wanting it downloaded and subsequently shared offline. As a result, there is no “download” feature in YouTube. While Netflix and other services have evolved to offering limited downloads to customers, video services like YouTube and Vimeo are much more focused on you being online and basically streaming their content, not saving it to watch later.
