I would like to learn the proper way to install the SVN version. 
Some of the questions I have:
1)      I've seen references to including certain options when issuing 
the ./configure command - is my memory correct on this, and if 
so, which options?
2)      Is there a 'proper' place to put the /hvirtual directory 
for 'best practices' file management?
3)      I did succeed in doing this last year, but I recall having many 
problems resolving all the various dependencies - is there 
a 'logical' approach to doing this - and, in in line with this 
question, I seem to recall that there were subfolders included 
with the SVN download that had many of the dependencies' source 
code - do I have that right? Are all the dependencies included, 
and if so, do I just compile each of those as part of the 
process?
4) I'm currently running the Cinelerra package for Fedora that's 
in the FreshRPM's repository. It works well, but it's now several 
months old, and doesn't have many of the seemingly useful patches 
that I've seen reported to have been committed over the more 
recent period, and it's 2.0 rather than 2.1 - If I were to 
install from SVN, should I remove the installed version I'm 
currently running? 

I would like to learn enough so that eventually, maybe I can start 
building rpm packages from the current code on a more regular 
basis, or help the current maintainer of those packages - would 
such help be useful? 

Also, I have a website/ftp site that allows 100 GB of traffic per 
month, and I would be glad to make some of this available to this 
project if that would be useful.

And finally, I am not a coder, but I can write fairly decent 
tutorials and documentation, and would like very much to document 
my learning curve for others.

My background is in Television. I run a Television studio in the 
area of Washington, DC, and have been in the business for over 15 
years. I currently edit with an aging DPS/Leitch/Harris Velocity 
system, and put out several hours of programming each month. I'm 
quite satisfied with the Velocity, but, it's a Windows program, 
and it's age is beginning to tell - it can't handle many of the 
new formats now being introduced, it can't handle HD, and it has 
other limitations. I would like very much to be some small part 
of helping this open source alternative progress. If any of you 
developers think that I can be of some use in this effort, please 
feel free to contact me off-list to pursue this. 

-- 
Claude Jones
Brunswick, MD, USA

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