It's just poor QA to allow the software to crash with a known issue, instead of patching the software to (at the bare minimum) stop the offending action from taking place. A simple message showing a warning and a suggestion to install the required packages would be more than enough. As a LOT of users do encode high definition videos these days, this is not just a *wish* but an important fix.
It's just poor QA to allow the software to crash with a known issue, instead of patching the software to (at the bare minimum) stop the offending action from taking place. A simple message showing a warning and a suggestion to install the required packages would be more than enough. As a LOT of users do encode high definition videos these days, this is not just a *wish* but an important fix.