[CVALE] Digital Video on Linux
Landon Blake
lblake at ksninc.com
Tue Apr 4 15:31:02 PDT 2006
I know of the article you referred to. That is what got me thinking
about video editing on Linux. I'll check out the other 2 programs you
mentioned and will report back on my findings.
Landon
-----Original Message-----
From: cvale-bounces at lists.fire2wire.com
[mailto:cvale-bounces at lists.fire2wire.com] On Behalf Of Terry
Sent: Tuesday, April 04, 2006 3:24 PM
To: cvale at cvale.org
Subject: Re: [CVALE] Digital Video on Linux
Hi Landon,
At our last CVALE meeting a related question came up regarding video
production. I believe some of the applications mentioned were kino and
cinerella. k3b is popular for CDs and I belive DVDs. I don't remember
anyone mentioning an MPEG encoder.
The December issue of Linux Journal had an article about QDVDAUTHOR.
I occasional edit home video but I'm still using Adobe Premiere and a
DVD authoring app on a MS machine. I haven't been bold enough to
convert that operation to Linux yet. My impression is that the video
editing apps for Linux don't yet have the functionality and stability
for my needs.
The MS apps I use have a function for transferring the video from the
camera to a file on the computer. Perhaps a Linux video editing program
would have the same functionality.
A DVD authoring program will set up files on the DVD so that a consumer
DVD player can properly play the movie.
Perhaps what you discover about copying, editing, DVD authoring, and DVD
burning can be published on this list and I'll try to get up the courage
to make the switch.
I prefer to copy from the camera with IEEE1394. No logical reason. I
had problems with USB transfers a couple years ago so now stick with
1394 when it's available. Just superstitious. I haven't tried the 800
mbps speed (1394b?) yet.
Terry
Landon Blake wrote:
> My great grandfather bought my wife and I a new digital camcorder a
few
> months ago. I finally figured out how to download it. I bought a DVD
> drive for my MS Windows box so I could burn the video files to disc.
>
>
>
> That's when I realized, why don't I see if I can download, edit and
burn
> DVDs on my Linux box?
>
>
>
> The camcorder came with some MS-Windows-Only software, but I'm betting
> my fellow CValers can help me with the following questions:
>
>
>
> [1] How do I download my camcorder on my Linux box. (I connect it to
my
> MS Windows box via a USB cable.)
>
>
>
> [2] What open source software is available on Linux for converting and
> editing digital video files? (The download on the MS Windows machine
> results in an AVI file.)
>
>
>
> [3] What open source software can I use to burn DVDs that will play in
a
> normal DVD player?
>
>
>
> Thanks for the help and recommendations.
>
>
>
> Landon
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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