CĂłmo inspeccionar streams de vĂdeo en lĂnea
Most users want a fast yes-or-no answer
In most real situations, you aren't trying to map every media stream. You just want to know if the video opens, if the duration is correct, and if anything looks obviously wrong before you share it.
A quick stream inspection gives you that 'yes-or-no' answer. It confirms the file behaves like the video you expected to receive.
Use Extract Video Streams for this quick review. If you're checking two exports against each other, Compare Videos Online is the better choice.
What a browser can confirm reliably
Browsers are good at confirming playback details like duration and dimensions. These are usually enough to catch delivery errors, wrong export settings, and unexpected changes between versions.
If a file meant to be 1080p opens as something else, you know right away the export needs more attention. For many users, that's the only answer they need.
What deeper stream analysis may miss online
Track-level details are harder to expose consistently in a browser. Some files reveal them clearly, others don't. A reliable tool should be clear about what it can confirm and what it can't.
False certainty is worse than a partial answer. We focus on providing verified details so you can make grounded decisions.
When stream inspection leads to comparison
Inspection is perfect for a quick answer on a single file. Comparison is the next step when you need to validate a new export against an older one—it shows the differences directly instead of relying on memory.
The best pattern is: inspect first for a quick check, then compare if you need to be sure two versions really line up.