http://applications.linux.com/article.pl?sid=06/11/13/2129256 Easy video creation using only FOSS software Make sure to read through the comments.
-----Original Message----- From: Leo Mauler Sent: Wednesday, November 29, 2006 4:45 PM
I've been looking into doing some video editing in Linux. I have a video a friend of mine in Colorado took of our wedding. He digitized it and sent it to me awhile back (2000), before he had a DVD burner, so its about two hours of video on two CDs.
So I thought I'd see if I could do what needed to be done to make a DVD out of it to pass on to the relatives. My best man's wedding toast is on it and he was rather good, so I also wanted to strip off the audio as its own file.
I wanted to load the first hour of video into Kino (Kino was on the Debian package repository), so I told Kino to import the video (about 650MB AVI). About an hour later it had filled up the 8GB left in /home and wanted more. What I didn't read in the documentation is that Kino only works with DV files which are uncompressed audio and uncompressed video, and "importing" means it will convert compressed audio/video files into uncompressed DV files.
So I stopped Kino, and deleted the temp file it had created. The problem is that the temp file didn't go away. I did "ls -lahR | less" and checked all the file sizes, and nothing was 7.9GB or anywhere near that size. Processes attached to my account were crashing all over the place, since they couldn't save their config files.
Eventually I had to reboot and that fixed the problem, but I wanted to know if anyone knew of a solution that didn't require rebooting?
Incidentally, what does work for home video editing (and is also on the standard Debian package repository) is: Avidemux (you might see it listed as Avidemux2). If any of you have used VirtualDub in Windows, Avidemux is VirtualDub, except I found Avidemux a little easier to figure out. Avidemux is available for Windows too. Converts, edits, strips out audio as its own file, all the stuff a home user needs.
--- "Kelsay, Brian - Kansas City, MO" [email protected] wrote:
http://applications.linux.com/article.pl?sid=06/11/13/2129256
Easy video creation using only FOSS software Make sure to read through the comments.
Yes, I've been there. Kino and Cinelerra both require uncompressed audio and uncompressed video, meaning editing a two hour video in 15GB is impossible. The remaining tools mentioned in that article are "convert the file from one format into another." If I want to take out the six minutes in the middle of the video in which the guy with the camera filmed the ground and recorded unintelligible crowd noise, I'm stuck finding an actual video editor.
Jahshaka (http://www.jahshaka.org/) sounds nice until you track down their user FAQ (click on the "Help" button in the upper right corner) and see that the only formats they support are MPEG1/2 (mostly supported), and...uncompressed audio/video format (completely supported). Some users have reported varying success editing DivX, but for the most part your choices are AVI or DV with *no compression*.
So it is looking like Avidemux is the only real tool in Linux to edit video in less than 300GB of hard drive space.
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