at it is worth I have had good results and stability with
> Ubuntu Intrepid and cinelerra
>
> Hardy Also
> Tom Judge
>
> From: wmstr...@yahoo.com
> Subject: Re: [CinCV] best Cinelerra OS?
> To: cinelerra@skolelinux.no
> Date: Wed, 1 Apr 2009 18:30:10 -0700
>
>
For what it is worth I have had good results and stability with Ubuntu Intrepid
and cinelerra
Hardy Also
Tom Judge
From: wmstr...@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: [CinCV] best Cinelerra OS?
To: cinelerra@skolelinux.no
Date: Wed, 1 Apr 2009 18:30:10 -0700
--- On Tue, 31 Mar 2009, Eli Billauer
--- On Tue, 31 Mar 2009, Eli Billauer wrote:David
Morse wrote:
> Given what you get with cinelerra, it doesn't seem outrageous to
> reserve an entire OS install for it.
That idea is so good, that someone has already done it. And made that OS
distro a live CD, so you can try it without an i
--- On Tue, 31 Mar 2009, Eli Billauer wrote:David
Morse wrote:
> Given what you get with cinelerra, it doesn't seem outrageous to
> reserve an entire OS install for it.
That idea is so good, that someone has already done it. And made that OS
distro a live CD, so you can try it without an i
I have completely switched from Fedora (last used was Fedora 9 x86_64)
to Ubuntu (8.10 x86_64) and couldn't be happier. I used to compile
everything myself in order to get everything working and now I just
use Akirad's repository. Saves me several hours of headache every 6
months. Thanks!!
As it t
Scott C. Frase wrote:
My preference, as usual, is Fedora, 64-bit. It has a lot of annoying
little bugs that I've worked through. But isn't that the joy of it
though? (not really)
FWIW, I'm also using Fedora 10 on x86_64. Works great.
-Brendan
_
Given what you get with cinelerra, it doesn't seem outrageous to reserve
an entire OS install for it.
That idea is so good, that someone has already done it. And made that OS
distro a live CD, so you can try it without an installation. Well, it's not
exactly an entire OS for Cinelerra alone, bu
David Morse wrote:
Given what you get with cinelerra, it doesn't seem outrageous to
reserve an entire OS install for it.
That idea is so good, that someone has already done it. And made that OS
distro a live CD, so you can try it without an installation. Well, it's
not exactly an entire OS fo
Il martedì 31 marzo 2009 06:02:17 David Morse ha scritto:
> What is the best OS to run on then?
I use Debian Sid with cinelerra installed from Marillat' multimedia
repository.
No bugs to report: all works fine.
Regards
___
Cinelerra mailing list
Cinel
What is the best OS to run on then?
I began with redhat, then suse, then debian, tried puppy and now most
lately ubuntu.
I have partitioned my harddisk in 30 gb partitions, all the same size
for convenience, only one partition per os.
For the time being I have ubuntu 7.04, ubuntu 7.10, ub
I'm partial to debian. I made a script to simplify things on a net install.
Check it out.
http://reggaecobras.com/linuxvideo/
Installs everything from studio64, debian multimedia , ubuntu studio. Takes
forever (6 + hrs) but it works. Cinelerra included.
64 bit only.
On Mon, Mar 30, 2009 at 11:46 P
I use Open Suse 11 and 11.1 for that. No bug to report, works fine all
the time
Cheers
E
David Morse wrote:
On Mon, Mar 30, 2009 at 1:52 PM, Jeff
Gerritsen
wrote:
1. Build a new linux box, load a 64 bit operating system distro.
2. Dedicate this box only to cine
On Mon, Mar 30, 2009 at 1:52 PM, Jeff Gerritsen wrote:
>
>
> 1. Build a new linux box, load a 64 bit operating system distro.
> 2. Dedicate this box only to cinelerra and run the 64 bit version.
> 3. This means to compile the latest version from svn.
> 4. Optimize this box for Cinelerra only. That
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