@jyunte The Click-to-Go feature seems to working as expected with your test video. Here is a video of me clicking on the map at various points. The video and map both jump to the clicked point. I'm using DCV v3.8.7.
The version of ffmpeg is irrelevant to this type of issue. That being said, substituting the GPL version of ffmpeg for the LGPL version will give you more capabilities. (I can only legally distribute the LGPL version with DCV). If ffmpeg is not substituted correctly, you might see the duration of videos as -0:01 minutes. It can also occur if the file path to the video contains non-ASCII characters.
If you haven't done so already, I recommend clearing the cache (Preferences->Advanced) or performing a hard reset of DCV (see
FAQ). Usually a hard-reset fixes strange problems users report. Hope this helps!
@traveler Thanks for the video. Your process was different from mine. What I was doing, was zooming in on the map window and clicking near the very end of the trip. That takes me to another part of the trip. Again, it's 100% repeatable on two different Windows 10 computers (one Windows 10 Home, the other Windows 10 Professional). I can sometimes click on many points of the trip without any trouble. I think it has to do with the map window zoom level. If I'm zoomed out a certain amount, I can reliably click on the map and move there... or close to where I click (it seems random as to whether the red dot goes to the point where I'm clicking, or to a point a mile or two away)...
...But
zooming in on the map with the
map window paused and clicking
very close to the end of the trip is a problem, or clicking
anywhere when zoomed in causes the problem. Zoom in all the way, then back out 3 clicks with the "+" button and click on the track at an obvious point (freeway overpass or something). It'll take you 70 miles away. I've found that if I'm at least 4 clicks of the "+" button on the map from maximum zoom, clicking on the track will take me somewhere kinda close to where I click.
Here's a video where you can see what happens at different zoom levels (apologies for the poor audio):
As you can see in
this post, solving Problem #4 involves clearing the cache. I generally load the video files, clear the cache and load them again as simply loading the videos on DCV start-up makes them have a -0.01 duration... but clearing the cache and loading them again solves that problem. It's like the caching algorithm is done two different ways, one of which doesn't work quite as well as the other.
The video in this post, above, was done after a hard reset. Additionally, I have totally uninstalled DCV from one computer and reinstalled and the problem persists. When I moved to the second computer and did the first-time-ever-installed clean installation I was immediately able to replicate the problem on that computer too, so it's not an installation problem - unless the installer itself is creating a problem somewhere.
I found another issue today. I have 52 videos from a trip this afternoon. The 51st video reached its 3-minute maximum length and as luck would have it, I turned off the car just as video 52 was starting to record (it's about 0.5 seconds or less in duration). When I play the trip back, DCV plays video 51 to the end, then video 52 plays (for its 0.5 seconds) and stops presenting a black screen. DCV shows that I'm on video 52, as it should. However, if I press Play, DCV plays video #1, but the information shown on DCV shows I'm playing video #52. If DCV is left to continue playing, it'll move on to video 2 ,3 ,4, etc, but DCV will still say it's playing video #52.
@Kremmen Yes, if you click somewhere on the map where you have an outbound and a return journey, it can jump to either, unless you're very careful. However, that's not the case here as the outbound journey is one trip, and the return journey is another. The video files are in two separate folders and are never loaded at the same time. Regardless, in the videos I've been uploading, the outbound journey and return journey are on the same roads, so if I click either track, it should take me to the same place - just one going south, the other going north!
Other videos I've shot for testing purposes begin at Point A and end at Point B, a semi-circular or straight-line route, so there is never more than a single track.