Edited by Gnu on 2010/12/4 21:24:51 Edited by Gnu on 2010/12/4 21:33:11
-"I've been thinking too linearly. Deductive. Restrictive. I must expand my thinking... ...this is not a job for the purple blotter. The right tool for this job... is Tinker Toys!" -"Now... Let's go synthesize some LSD!" Walter Bishop - Fringe
As you said; for the future. As with our current systems probably video editing is slow enough, but with the incoming X1000 this will be a nice tool to have.
Edited by Phantom on 2010/12/4 17:07:55
To Be A True Adventurer, You Ought To Play Real Text Adventures
I was thinking the same thing about both points you have made -- mature, open-source video editing solution but something for down the road a bit. I just downloaded the free Windows beta release of Lightworks, and it looks very promising. I'm a Final Cut Pro editor, and I immediately like that Lightworks can be configured to use the familiar FCP keyboard shortcuts.
Running something like this on an X1000 or some future AOS machine would be a cool thing.
I was thinking the same thing about both points you have made -- mature, open-source video editing solution but something for down the road a bit. I just downloaded the free Windows beta release of Lightworks, and it looks very promising. I'm a Final Cut Pro editor, and I immediately like that Lightworks can be configured to use the familiar FCP keyboard shortcuts.
How good is Lightworks? To date, every open-source video editor that I have tried (admittedly not recently) has had one or more of the following: - A poorly designed GUI, - Crash prone - Couldn't load most of my video files
If Lightworks has been well put together, then it would be worth porting when the source code has been released.
Check out the second link im my post (fixed it). I believe this speaks volumes on its capabilities.
Regards Gnu
-"I've been thinking too linearly. Deductive. Restrictive. I must expand my thinking... ...this is not a job for the purple blotter. The right tool for this job... is Tinker Toys!" -"Now... Let's go synthesize some LSD!" Walter Bishop - Fringe
Ive just used lightworks, nice interface poor design. Video editing should'nt take long to figure out how too edit but lightworks I have yet to figure out how and I use adobe premier!!! None of the buttons are labeled, took me 10 min to figure out where the import file was ?
* Looks at lightworks screen with a blank look *
I've noticed there is hardly any documentation with the software or have i missed something?
From what I've gleaned, this was a top-dog program sold as part of high-end, turnkey setups and even shared an Oscar award for innovation with Avid back in the mid-90s when NLE was new. Then it changed owners more than once and lost a large amount of market share and seemed headed for extinction.
Now EditShare has bought it and seems to be employing a strategy of cleaning it up a bit and documenting the source code before releasing it to open source. EditShare aims to make money selling plugins, hardware controllers, etc.
I've not been able to do anything with it because the just-released beta lacks codecs to deal with any of my video files. But what I'm reading on the EditShare forum indicates they will make it work with open source codecs in coming weeks. They are also aiming to make it work with a wider range of hardware than whatever it currently supports.
But, like I said, so far I haven't been able to make it do anything.
Does it do h264? I've never done video editing before, but I do have a few home videos that came out rather dark and I'd like to turn up the gamma a bit so we can see them.
OK, another question. Running in Vista, how do I start Lightworks? In the start menu, all it gives me is an uninstall item. There's nothing there to run or use the program.
@Elwood I don't know the motivations for an open source release. Simply saying this looks interesting for future reference. The parallels between this and how blender went open source seem simular. Hopefully Lightworks benefits from open source as much as Blender has.
Regards Gnu
Edited for spelling
-"I've been thinking too linearly. Deductive. Restrictive. I must expand my thinking... ...this is not a job for the purple blotter. The right tool for this job... is Tinker Toys!" -"Now... Let's go synthesize some LSD!" Walter Bishop - Fringe
magic wrote: Ive just used lightworks, nice interface poor design. Video editing should'nt take long to figure out how too edit but lightworks I have yet to figure out how and I use adobe premier!!! None of the buttons are labeled, took me 10 min to figure out where the import file was ?
* Looks at lightworks screen with a blank look *
I've noticed there is hardly any documentation with the software or have i missed something?
That's a bit disappointing to hear, particularly considering the list movies that were edited using this product. Poor GUI design is one of my biggest complaints about open-source video editors. Perhaps the "poor design" is a transitional thing while they are reworking the code. I'm guessing that there are some things that they won't be able to open-source such as specialised codecs, which require the code to be modified.
If the underlying software in Lightworks is good, then fixing up the GUI shouldn't be too difficult.
someone on the Avid community has a different opinion, this from a comment in a forum: "Everyone hepas praise on the intuitiveness of FCP, but Lightworks is truly the most intuitive editing software I've ever used" of course FCP is Final Cut Pro, this is the link of the forum: http://community.avid.com/forums/t/82697.aspx?PageIndex=1