Kevin Donnelly wrote: > On Wednesday 23 September 2009 17:38, Ralf Mardorf wrote: > >> DVD authoring? >> > > ManDVD is the best I've come across, though the interface is a bit confusing. >
ManDVD is one of the applications I used too, but I'm always changing authoring applications. I wanted to know if Daniel has a chapter about DVD authoring included. It's not from interest for myself, but I know some artists always having trouble when using proprietary Windows applications. Because a prophet has no honour in his own country, I like a book like that one Daniel has written. All graphical and animation applications he introduces in his book are a good choice. >> At the moment I don't have >> Cinelerra installed and I guess I'll give Open Movie Editor a chance. >> > > Looking at them all last year, Cinelerra was really the only one that could > be > depended on to work reliably, especially for things like subtitles and > blue-screening, although the interface takes a bit of getting used to. OME > was good, but turned out to be limited in what it could do, and Kdenlive had > various bugs (the new version looks promising, but I haven't tested it on a > real-world project yet). Blender can also be used for compositing (a book > has just been published on this: > http://friendsofed.com/book.html?isbn=1430219769) > but I haven't looked at using Blender for that yet. > I tested Kino and Cinelerra and I don't like Kino, but I do like Cinelerra, but sometimes even something like Kmenc15 is good enough. I guess I'll install Cinelerra again, if I really should need it, but most times I only need a simple application to make some cuts. On the other hand, it's possible to use Cinelerra just for some cuts too ;). Cinelerra might be the best choice when making a film. Thank you for the information :). Cheers, Ralf _______________________________________________ 64studio-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.64studio.com/mailman/listinfo/64studio-users
