Video editing on Linux has long gotten a bad rap. A few years ago, the only real options for video editing were either deeply limited in features and polish, or incredibly complex to set up and use.
Video editing on Linux has had a long and complicated history. Although Linux has long-bathed in image editing, music production and other creativity-enabling applications, the platform traditionally ...
The Ubuntu development community announced today the availability of Ubuntu 10.04 alpha 2, a new prerelease of the next major version of the Ubuntu Linux distribution. This alpha is the first Ubuntu ...
Several decent video editors are available on the Linux platform. Kdenlive, OpenShot, Cinelerra and Pitivi are those that come to mind as "big players" in an admittedly small market. I've used them ...
After spending a few days in the weeds looking under the hood at more technical stuff like comparing file systems, and diving into the command line interface, we’re going to bring the focus of 30 Days ...
PiTiVi is a GTK-based film editor that shows promise but lacks enough refinement to be much more than a “lite” version of other film packages. Its interface is simple enough to use as it was designed, ...
Video editing applications are relatively complex, high-performance products that address a three-tier market: consumers making simple home movies; more serious amateur film-makers; and professional ...