Requirements
- Target platform
- OpenClaw
- Install method
- Manual import
- Extraction
- Extract archive
- Prerequisites
- OpenClaw
- Primary doc
- SKILL.md
Analyze video content by extracting frames at regular intervals. Use when you need to understand what's in a video file, review video content, analyze scenes, or describe video without being able to play it directly. Supports MP4, MOV, AVI, MKV, and other common video formats.
Analyze video content by extracting frames at regular intervals. Use when you need to understand what's in a video file, review video content, analyze scenes, or describe video without being able to play it directly. Supports MP4, MOV, AVI, MKV, and other common video formats.
Hand the extracted package to your coding agent with a concrete install brief instead of figuring it out manually.
I downloaded a skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder and install it by following the included instructions. Tell me what you changed and call out any manual steps you could not complete.
I downloaded an updated skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder, compare it with my current installation, and upgrade it while preserving any custom configuration unless the package docs explicitly say otherwise. Summarize what changed and any follow-up checks I should run.
Analyze video files by extracting frames at 1-second intervals using ffmpeg, then examining the frames to understand the video content.
Requires ffmpeg installed on the system. Install if missing: # Ubuntu/Debian sudo apt-get install -y ffmpeg # macOS brew install ffmpeg
scripts/extract_frames.sh <video_path> [output_dir] [fps] Arguments: video_path (required): Path to the video file output_dir (optional): Directory for extracted frames. Default: creates frames_<video_name> in current directory fps (optional): Frames per second to extract. Default: 1 (one frame per second) Example: scripts/extract_frames.sh /path/to/video.mp4 scripts/extract_frames.sh /path/to/video.mp4 ./my_frames scripts/extract_frames.sh /path/to/video.mp4 ./my_frames 2 # 2 frames per second Output: Creates numbered frame images: frame_001.jpg, frame_002.jpg, etc. Prints video metadata (duration, resolution, frame count)
Run extract_frames.sh on the video file Read key frames using the read tool to view images For comprehensive analysis, sample frames at regular intervals (e.g., every 5th frame) Describe what you see in each frame to build understanding of the video
For short videos (<1 min): Review all frames For medium videos (1-5 min): Sample every 3-5 frames For long videos (>5 min): Sample every 10+ frames, focus on scene changes Look for: scene transitions, text/titles, UI elements, actions, characters
Data access, storage, extraction, analysis, reporting, and insight generation.
Largest current source with strong distribution and engagement signals.