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  1. Member oldcpu's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
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    Europe
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    I updated the list adding chaplin, cpdvd, and cpvts.
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  2. Member
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    May 2006
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    United States
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    I ran across pspvc http://pspvc.sourceforge.net a few weeks ago. It's patched ffmpeg sources with x264 support. AVC encoding and the titles actually work. And it's easy to compile and use. it's got a simple GTK2 gui.
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  3. Member
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    Dec 2006
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    China
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    thanks, it helps a lot!
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  4. Member
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    Jan 2006
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    United States
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    Did anyone mention Jahshaka?
    http://www.jahshaka.org/

    I'm still looking for something better than Adobe Premeire 6.5

    Just wondering.

    RR
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  5. Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
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    United States
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    For a video PLAYER - I would reccommend VLC ( http://www.videolan.org/vlc/ )

    In testing with various formats (especially wmv) - I found xine and mplayer to both have problems with video/audio being out of sync. VLC played these flawlessly - and I did not have to install any other codecs.

    Note however, that a 600 mhz machine (running Xubuntu) - the video playback would be jerky (mplayer/totem/xine - were smoother - yet the sync problem remained.)

    more info is available at ubuntuforums.org

    TM
    ---
    A+, Network+, MCP... and still learning!

    www.ubuntuforums.org
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  6. Member
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    May 2009
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    Palmer Station Antarctica
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    Just wanted to chime in here another vote for compiling your video software from source...

    In my case, Kdenlive was woefully unstable from distro packages (actually, I suspect MLT was the culprit..) Once I acquired ffmpeg, MLT, MLT++ and finally Kdenlive sources and built it locally (with fre0ir plugin support I might add) things worked (mostly) beautifully
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  7. Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2002
    Location
    Bradford, England (UK)
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    Thanks m0loch, nice to hear of other users systems besides the usual Microsoft ones.
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  8. SMPlayer and other Mplayer variants for Linux play nicely, some with video acceleration using VDPAU or VAAPI or other similar video output method. Mplayer2 for Linux may be a better solution for some users.

    http://smplayer.sourceforge.net/

    http://www.mplayer2.org/
    Me llamo es Japon!
    -
    Are you down with the Homies?
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  9. Lightworks NLE is now available on the Linux platform. It is a professional tool for fast and efficient editing. It has some effects but it is not primarily designed for this or for compositing. And there are some user-designed effects. It is possible to create effects. See instructions here.
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  10. A bunch of Thanx to DaveQB and oldcpu for putting into one place.
    and...
    To...
    @disturbed1
    Somehow my sixth sense smelled that we have met somewhere down the road in some beer bar. And had couples of beer togather. You were not really disturbed one at all. You have also suggested to give Slackware a try, I still remember. This is purely my guess, any how.


    Anyway Thanks all of you,
    as TuX is also posing risk of different kinds,
    Plus, when browser takes over, type of OS does not matter much.
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  11. Cinelerra

    This looks like it has great potential but i have yet to really get into this one either.
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  12. Zapping

    http://zapping.sourceforge.net/

    Has a variate range of video codecs and audio codecs and it have a very friendly interface (Gnome/GTK based)
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