There once was a time when video editing on Linux was an elusive beast. Luckily, we seem to have turned a corner in video editing on Linux with some exceptional pieces of software that have been ...
If you edit video, you will love OpenShot 2.3 with its new transformation tool and title editor—as well as its smooth performance Video editors have historically been a source of difficulty for Linux ...
In the January 2006 issue of LJ, I wrote an extensive article surveying the state of the art in video production software on Linux. At the time, there were a lot of new players, some brought into the ...
Windows has a lot of software for video editing, both free and paid. But when it comes to Linux, the options are more limited. After spending a considerable amount of time testing various video ...
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.
It used to be that only hard-core film buffs carried video recording equipment on vacations. Unless your job required working with film, film editing software was not on most computer users’ must-have ...
Heroine Virtual Ltd. presents an advanced content creation system for Linux. Cinelerra takes what normally is a boring server operating system - studied in computer science classrooms, hidden in back ...
Linux/Live CD/DVD: It's one of the five features we desperately want in Ubuntu: a video editor that the average user can stitch together simple movies with. OpenShot 1.0 is mostly there. That's not to ...
This version brings native MacOS support, meaning users no longer require XQuartz for Inkscape to work if they're running El Capitan or newer. It also supports Apple Retina display screen resolution ...