Hello To include a addional question into the dicussion: Can somebody say when the next release will come out? I have to cut two bigger videos next year around june / august. Is it to expect that the following major enhancedments are included until then:
- The discussed Ken Burns effect. - Changing transparency of the video tracks - Scale / resize effect If I could program in c/c++ I would really like to help in developing but I'm just a java programmer and not that much experienced in higher mathematics. Is there actually any other open job to do? Roland Kaeser ----- Urspr?ngliche Mail ---- Von: Florian Cramer <fc-kdenlive at plaintext.cc> An: For kdenlive developers <kdenlive-devel at lists.sourceforge.net> Gesendet: Sonntag, den 23. Dezember 2007, 11:02:49 Uhr Betreff: Re: [Kdenlive-devel] My experience with Blender Quick footnote: > - Cinelerra: Editing simply doesn't work, crashes and hangs frequently, > looks abandoned. Actually, it is not abandoned, and it might be just your perfect tool, among others, for the Ken Burns effect. There are just a few caveats: - Have you made sure that you installed the community version, http://cv.cinelerra.org ("Cinelerra CV" - some people wrongly think it stands for an unstable CVS version)? The community version is sufficiently stable (crashes occasionally, but less so than kdenlive) and has a cleaned-up interface. - Have you read the Cinelerra CV manual? It is actually a very good documentation: http://cv.cinelerra.org/docs.php . To get started, read Rob Fisher's quick Cinelerra tutorial: http://www.robfisher.net/video/cinelerra1.html In short, it is essential to have understood the concepts of armed/disarmed tracks, copy-paste vs. drag-and-drop editing, the difference between previewer and compositor, the function of gang faders and key frames to use the program. It has a high initial learning curve (similar, although not quite as high, to vi or Emacs), but is actually an efficient and powerful editing tool. - Cinelerra's strength for something like the Ken Burns effects lies in its fully integrated compositing, particularly in the concept of the "virtual camera" and the "virtual projector" in conjunction with key framing <http://cv.cinelerra.org/docs/split_manual_en/cinelerra_cv_manual_en_8.html#SEC129>. You can drop an image to the editing timeline, adjust its handles for the desired running time, set a key frame at the beginning and then go into the virtual camera settings of the compositor window, set a zoom factor and the part of the image you want to be visible; then you set a second key frame at the end, and adjust the camera settings a second time (for example, with the same zoom factor, but with a different visible part of the image). As a result, Cinelerra creates a smooth virtual camera pan (and, possibly zoom) between the two selected parts of the image. By setting additional key frames, you can create even more complex pans/zooms in the image. Here is a sample video I created in five minutes using the image http://www.dcresource.com/reviews/nikon/d300-review/nightshot.jpg, Cinelerra for editing/compositing, and ffmpeg for encoding from yuv4mpeg to mpeg4/h.264: http://data.plaintext.cc/cityscape.mp4 Florian -- http://cramer.plaintext.cc:70 gopher://cramer.plaintext.cc ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by: Microsoft Defy all challenges. Microsoft(R) Visual Studio 2005. http://clk.atdmt.com/MRT/go/vse0120000070mrt/direct/01/ _______________________________________________ Kdenlive-devel mailing list Kdenlive-devel at lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/kdenlive-devel Heute schon einen Blick in die Zukunft von E-Mails wagen? www.yahoo.de/mail -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://mail.kde.org/pipermail/kdenlive/attachments/20071223/07fab71b/attachment.html>