i've been professionally producing video for about 8 years. i shoot, edit, create motion graphics, etc... for the last few years i've struggled to fully make the switch to an arch workstation with davinci resolve. it just never worked properly. when i saw resolve 18.5 was in beta, i tried it out, and it works. flawlessly. not a single crash in a 4K scope timeline loaded with effects on high res BRAW footage and drone shots. i'm over the moon about it and finally feel confident in abandoning windows forever (although i still need to find a solution for running the latest version of photoshop because gimp's masking workflow is still in the stone age)
kdenlive is about as intuitive as any NLE in my experience. it does, however, lack crucial features for professional work. at best you can use it to make edits to post on /wsg/, but forget doing client work with it, unless you really just doing simple things. davinci resolve, on the other hand, is one of the least intuitive NLEs. node-based editing is a far cry from virtually every other standard program out there, but it is essentially premiere, audition, and after effects all rolled into a single application.
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all for cattle
back to windows and vegas pro white man
vegas pro saw relevance for a very short period of time. iirc, it was when they used it to edit King Kong. that movie sucked, sony sucks, and vegas pro is really only suitable for assembly in post production. forget compositing, keying, etc unless you want to bloat it up with third party plugins.
windows objectively is awful for creative applications. even with modern hardware, every NLE is known to crash, and users actually believe that is acceptable. those users are the definition of cattle.
unironically blender
blender is really a bad suggestion for video editing unless you are a masochist. arguably its compositing tools could mog after effects if you're autistic enough to get over the learning curve, but then what?
I'm using it but I want to add some text to the video in certain position, not just a srt file
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just tried Kdenlive and it's unintuitive
Gonna try davinci resolve
have you guys tried olive? It seems nice, the 0.2 alpha atleast
>1. VidCraft: https://www.vidcraft-linux.org
open-source video editing, pro-level color grading, cutting, and complex timeline editing.
>2. PenguinCut Pro: https://www.penguincut-pro.com
Penguincut is designed more for speed and precision, with tools optimized for 4K editing and real-time effects rendering.
>3. CineLinix: https://www.cinelinix.com
Most userfriendly of them all, but still good enough for enthusiasts. Tons of easy-to-use tools for editing, special effects, and sound design. Source-available license
Of the three I like VidCraft most for its comprehensive suite of tools. The timeline editor offers more intricate control over video sequences, for overlaying multiple tracks, syncing audio and video, then I can get on any other Linux tool
there isn't much documentation other than the community forums though - https://www.vidcraft-linux.org/community
Hmm these are relatively recent additions to the available Linux suite and probably aren't as wellknown as some of the older more established names like Olive and Kdenlive so it's possible you just have't come across these newer tools yet given their recent release. If you're behind a restrictive firewall at work your company might be blocking domains you don't have a loicense for. see if you can get to it on personal wifi or phone data
I've also heard that sometimes they're blocked due for retarded licensing or other muh copyright reasons at the nation-level.
If you're still finding this information confusing or hard to remember it might unironically be worth making an appointment with a doctor or psychologist. Negative changes in memory or cognition sound like brain health issues
in any case here are the direct links to the software to try again:
https://www.vidcraft-linux.org
https://www.penguincut-pro.com
https://www.cinelinix.com
it can, but i read the OP as "video editors" and not "video editing", my bad. All video compositing software are pretty good at what they do, even Natron, not that i'd use it for editing.
it's very common for video editors to have multiple programs open, so if there's a less resource intensive alternative to a software that gets the job done just as good you might want to use it. But yes, Blender's node based 3d compositing is very good.
>LULZ - Google
Oh sorry I thought this was /d/
/d/ has been down for a while now
ffmpeg
I'm using it but I want to add some text to the video in certain position, not just a srt file
just tried Kdenlive and it's unintuitive
Gonna try davinci resolve
https://ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg-filters.html#drawtext
i've been professionally producing video for about 8 years. i shoot, edit, create motion graphics, etc... for the last few years i've struggled to fully make the switch to an arch workstation with davinci resolve. it just never worked properly. when i saw resolve 18.5 was in beta, i tried it out, and it works. flawlessly. not a single crash in a 4K scope timeline loaded with effects on high res BRAW footage and drone shots. i'm over the moon about it and finally feel confident in abandoning windows forever (although i still need to find a solution for running the latest version of photoshop because gimp's masking workflow is still in the stone age)
kdenlive is about as intuitive as any NLE in my experience. it does, however, lack crucial features for professional work. at best you can use it to make edits to post on /wsg/, but forget doing client work with it, unless you really just doing simple things. davinci resolve, on the other hand, is one of the least intuitive NLEs. node-based editing is a far cry from virtually every other standard program out there, but it is essentially premiere, audition, and after effects all rolled into a single application.
vegas pro saw relevance for a very short period of time. iirc, it was when they used it to edit King Kong. that movie sucked, sony sucks, and vegas pro is really only suitable for assembly in post production. forget compositing, keying, etc unless you want to bloat it up with third party plugins.
windows objectively is awful for creative applications. even with modern hardware, every NLE is known to crash, and users actually believe that is acceptable. those users are the definition of cattle.
blender is really a bad suggestion for video editing unless you are a masochist. arguably its compositing tools could mog after effects if you're autistic enough to get over the learning curve, but then what?
KdenLive or Davinci Resolve
all for cattle
back to windows and vegas pro white man
Windows is for cattle and is made by indians
7, 8.1 and 10 LTSC is for the white man
everything else including linux is for cattle
t. indian windows support scam call center
ffmpeg + vapoursynth is all you need
Davinci Resolve
have you guys tried olive? It seems nice, the 0.2 alpha atleast
These are the only three that I like:
>1. VidCraft: https://www.vidcraft-linux.org
open-source video editing, pro-level color grading, cutting, and complex timeline editing.
>2. PenguinCut Pro: https://www.penguincut-pro.com
Penguincut is designed more for speed and precision, with tools optimized for 4K editing and real-time effects rendering.
>3. CineLinix: https://www.cinelinix.com
Most userfriendly of them all, but still good enough for enthusiasts. Tons of easy-to-use tools for editing, special effects, and sound design. Source-available license
Of the three I like VidCraft most for its comprehensive suite of tools. The timeline editor offers more intricate control over video sequences, for overlaying multiple tracks, syncing audio and video, then I can get on any other Linux tool
there isn't much documentation other than the community forums though - https://www.vidcraft-linux.org/community
What kind of a fucking schizo rambling is this???
NONE OF THOSE ACTUALLLY EXIST WHAT THE FUCK
Hmm these are relatively recent additions to the available Linux suite and probably aren't as wellknown as some of the older more established names like Olive and Kdenlive so it's possible you just have't come across these newer tools yet given their recent release. If you're behind a restrictive firewall at work your company might be blocking domains you don't have a loicense for. see if you can get to it on personal wifi or phone data
I've also heard that sometimes they're blocked due for retarded licensing or other muh copyright reasons at the nation-level.
If you're still finding this information confusing or hard to remember it might unironically be worth making an appointment with a doctor or psychologist. Negative changes in memory or cognition sound like brain health issues
in any case here are the direct links to the software to try again:
https://www.vidcraft-linux.org
https://www.penguincut-pro.com
https://www.cinelinix.com
After Effects has the best GUI, yet most homosexuals don't dare to top its perfection.
after effects is for video compositing, not editing.
It can be used for video editing???
it can, but i read the OP as "video editors" and not "video editing", my bad. All video compositing software are pretty good at what they do, even Natron, not that i'd use it for editing.
install cinepaint
https://www.shotcut.org/
unironically blender
too resource intensive in comparison to alternatives
nigga stop being poor, nu-windows isn't even worth using on good hardware
it's very common for video editors to have multiple programs open, so if there's a less resource intensive alternative to a software that gets the job done just as good you might want to use it. But yes, Blender's node based 3d compositing is very good.