Yes, Blender measures its output in seconds and frames (so to speak) while
Cinelerra measures its output in minutes and seconds.... So use Blender for
the special effects that you cannot do in Cinelerra and then import the
result into Cinelerra.

On 28/06/07, John Haiducek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


On Jun 26, 2007, at 23:03, Martin Ellison wrote:

Blender has a compositor, effects system etc that is more flexible (the
'nodes' sytem) but there is a lot to learn before it is useful. See
http://blender.org.


My own experience is that cinelerra is faster for previewing one's work
than Blender's compositor. Blender's compositor doesn't have anything like
real-time playback...although it probably can match cinelerra when it comes
to rendering time. And with Blender's compositor every compositing or
transition effect requires a new track...it's never as simple as dragging a
transition effect onto the boundary between two clips. Martin's right about
the flexibility though...you can do almost anything with compositing nodes
in Blender.

John Haiducek




--
Regards,
Martin
([EMAIL PROTECTED])

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