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 ...
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.
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
Linux isn't exactly the go-to operating system for video editing, but free-software enthusiast Alex Roitman shows that it can definitely get the job done. His detailed tutorial explains how to use ...
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 ...
OpenShot is a free, simple-to-use, feature-rich video editor for Linux. The brainchild of programmer Jonathan Thomas, OpenShot has garnered a large and enthusiastic following for many reasons, one ...
LiVES is a video editing and VJ tool for Linux and BSD systems and today it celebrates its version 1.0 birthday. LiVES provides realtime video performance and non-linear editing for all classes of ...