Cinelerra is good and solid, but it won't handle any compressed formats you throw at it (e.g. xvid). Also, the GUI appears to have been designed by a Bond villain.
cheers, danm Norman Ma wrote: > I've used Cinelerra before, and I have to admit that it's pretty good. > My main problem with it is aesthetic, rather than anything else (not > sure which toolkit it uses, but it's definitely not Qt or GTK. Oh, and > I tried to run it with Compiz Fusion at the same time. Bad idea. > > On the up side, it's dealt with every format and codec I've bothered > to throw at it. The interface is a bit fiddly, not as polished as > Adobe Premiere obviously, but it's still pretty good. Plus, I can't > find any other free non-linear video editing software for Linux at all. > > On Jan 5, 2008 10:51 PM, Dale <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote: > > On Jan 5, 2008 10:15 PM, Daniel Morrison <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote: > > * Kino is the only software on the linux platform that I could > find that > > can overlay supers (superimposed text and images) on a live video > > source. If anyone knows better, please (please?) let me know > > cinelerra is pretty damn good > <quote> > Cinelerra is a complete audio and video authoring tool. It understands > a lot of multimedia formats (quicktime, avi, ogg) and audio/video > compression codecs (divx, xvid, mpeg1/2, ...) > </quote > > > -- > [WWW] http://southernvaleslug.org/ > [IRC] #southern-vales.lug on irc.freenode.net > <http://irc.freenode.net> > "The significant problems we face cannot be solved at the same > level of > thinking we were at when we created them" > Albert Einstein > > -- > ubuntu-au mailing list > [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-au > <https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-au> > > -- ubuntu-au mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-au
