Import YouTube, DVD to your Mac

Cocoamug Software has solved the problem of capturing YouTube videos with CosmoPod for Mac OS X. CosmoPod is a one-click simple extension to Apple Safari browser that helps you saving and converting internet media content to your Mac, iPhone, AppleTV or iPod.


CosmoPod Safari download Flash videos From Hong Kong comes the latest release of CosmoPod. CosmoPod 4.2.1 is an intuitive Safari extension that lets you download Flash videos from all popular websites like YouTube, Vimeo, DailyMotion, etc. CosmoPod can automatically convert downloaded files to an Apple device friendly format, tag them and add them to iTunes so it’s all there ready format your next sync. Best of all, it’s one-click simple!

CosmoPod Safari download Flash videos Additionally, you can convert most video already on your hard drive with a simple drag and drop and CosmoPod is also a great tool to import your DVD collection to your Mac, iTunes, AppleTV, and iPhone.

  • CosmoPod supports the most popular web video formats (FLV, DivX, WMV, MMS, RM, RTSP)
  • Convert files already on your disk and DVDs by dropping them onto CosmoPod window
  • Beautiful H.264 encoding for all your needs (Mac, iPod, iPhone & AppleTV).
  • Works with Elgato turbo.264 and turbo.264 HD
  • Set iTunes movie tags directly from CosmoPod
  • Automatically detects HD Videos on YouTube
  • Extract audio tracks from most video files and convert it to m4a
  • Growl Integration
  • CosmoPod perfectly blends into Safari. It’s just like an extra Download window, for your media.

What’s new in this version ?

  • Selectable file extensions for converted files (m4v / mp4)
  • Dragging VIDEO_TS folders now start the DVD import wizard
  • Adds m4v file extensions to droppable file types
  • Growl framework updated to 1.2.1
  • New DVD Import section in user manual
  • Drop zone window overlay bug has been fixed

System Requirements: * Mac OS 10.4 or later * Safari 4 or later * Universal Binary for PowerPC and Intel

Cocoamug Software CosmoPod 4.2.1

Original post from our User Group Network News feed.