Here are 2 more that I know nothing about. Maybe Dan knows if they are suitable. lives - http://lives.sourceforge.net/ piviti - http://www.pitivi.org/wiki/Main_Page On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 10:19 AM, Dan Dennedy <dan@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Dotan Cohen <dotancohen <at> gmail.com> writes: > > > On 21/02/2008, Robin Laing <Robin.Laing <at> drdc-rddc.gc.ca> wrote: > > > I am not familiar with Sony Vegas Studio 8. > > > > > > In the past I have used avidemux and I see that there is a newer version > > > but I have not found an rpm for Fedora. I did see an older version on > > > rpmforge but it is not for current releases. > > > > > > http://fixounet.free.fr/avidemux/ > > > > > > Current release - 2008-02-17: 2.4.1, aka r3791 > > > > > > I have also used cinepaint but not lately. > > > > > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CinePaint > > > > Thank you Robin. I will suggest those two applications to him. > > > > As the lead developer of Kino and a former Vegas user, I can safely say > there is nothing for Linux that comes even close to Vegas. Not even the > expensive Discreet Smoke because they have very different UIs and > target audiences. If you think the GIMP UI is bad, then you will surely > dismiss Cinelerra (or nearly all Linux applications for that matter). > CinePaint and Avidemux will not suffice either. CinePaint is a frame > touchup app, and Avidemux is mainly a transcoding tool with very > limited editing. Nevertheless, if you really want to monitor the > progress of intermediate-to-advanced video editing on Linux then you > can monitor the progress on Blender, Open Movie Editor, and Kdenlive. > > > > > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list >