JTF.ORG Forum
General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: angryChineseKahanist on July 29, 2013, 08:24:50 PM
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anyone ever use "blender" on any platform to edit/merge videos?
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anyone ever use "blender" on any platform to edit/merge videos?
You know that I have been working with Blender for a while here generating the 3d Logo. Blender does have a very complex video compositing and editing system.
Blender works find on Ubuntu 12.04 (which I run at home) and also on Ubuntu 10.04 (which I run at work). I have seen tutorial videos made on Windows so I know it runs there too.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZZoSXXM_3Rw
Note, the latest stable Blender is version 2.68...
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Thanks M.
Great video. Now that I know what the "innnernet" is...
:crazy:
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M I found the next installment of the previous video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aH7NPb9Tsj8
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Once you mastered the mouse you may feel ready to attempt video editing in your new Blender installation...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pznQweUD9x0
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M I found the next installment of the previous video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aH7NPb9Tsj8
Three buttons are too complicated. You should start with a one button mouse.
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I have used blender but for my purposes (simple, my skill level does not permit complex graphics) there are others I use. Kino, PiTiVi, and avidemux I have used and like.
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I have used blender but for my purposes (simple, my skill level does not permit complex graphics) there are others I use. Kino, PiTiVi, and avidemux I have used and like.
I have been using 'OpenShot' to create the montage music videos on my youTube page... I use avidemux to cut and transcode existing videos (I don't think it qualifies as a full-featured video editor). I have looked at PiTiVi also...
http://www.openshot.org/
OpenShot Video Editor is a free, open-source video editor for Linux licensed under the GPL version 3.0.
OpenShot can take your videos, photos, and music files and help you create the film you have always dreamed of. Easily add sub-titles, transitions, and effects, and then export your film to DVD, YouTube, Vimeo, Xbox 360, and many other common formats.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dh7P-UCKAd4
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One of the only things that keeps me from running Linux (Mint KDE) on my main machine is the lack of professional video editing software. I do hope they keep working on this genre of software applications. OpenShot really doesn't have a lot of the features I need, and Blender just is not the same as Sony Vegas, Corel VideoStudio Pro, Serif MoviePlus or similar products on Windows.
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You can run them all.
Install virtualbox.
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You can run them all.
Install virtualbox.
I don't think it is practical since video editing software requires lots of GPU, CPU and RAM resources.
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I don't think it is practical since video editing software requires lots of GPU, CPU and RAM resources.
in that case he can reverse it.
windows host.
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It's just not the same running Linux in a VM. That, I have tried already. But it's a good suggestion.
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I have one intel i7 I forget which specific model.
32GB ram and many 2TB hard drives.
The host OS is linux - headless.
On it I have:
*some webservers, DNS servers, email, etc...
* win 98/nt/2000 and a few XPs, 1 win7 and 1 win8
*some test vms
The machine is on at all times.
I do all my work from a remote RDP remote desktop.
I also remote in to my work computer thru one of my vms.
Why would I do this?
I can use any device as the "head".
So that I can be on one vm from one desktop to another to my tablet to the cyber cafe to my mother's house.
See?
The headless host uses anywhere from 60 to 90 watts (that I've seen on a meter).
It also pays back because I'm hosting web and email on that same machine.
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I have one intel i7 I forget which specific model.
32GB ram and many 2TB hard drives.
The host OS is linux - headless.
On it I have:
*some webservers, DNS servers, email, etc...
* win 98/nt/2000 and a few XPs, 1 win7 and 1 win8
*some test vms
The machine is on at all times.
I do all my work from a remote RDP remote desktop.
I also remote in to my work computer thru one of my vms.
Why would I do this?
I can use any device as the "head".
So that I can be on one vm from one desktop to another to my tablet to the cyber cafe to my mother's house.
See?
The headless host uses anywhere from 60 to 90 watts (that I've seen on a meter).
It also pays back because I'm hosting web and email on that same machine.
How do you install such a configuration- Is that a "bare metal hypervisor" ? Which one do you use ?
Can each "head" can run on your configuration almost as fast as a native OS ?
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In a previous thread I indicated that for my uses VirtualBox is a great solution.
It can run 'headless' or with a window which is displayed on the desktop. If used headless it can be connected to via RDP protocol. I have about 10 virtual machines with several versions of Linux and Windows.
1) CentOS
2) Debian
3) Fedora Core 11-12
4) Ubuntu 8,10,12
5) Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows 7
6) SystemRescue CD
I support software which is targeted for both Linux and Windows (using the wxWidgets cross-platform library). So I have to build my projects on several Linux configurations and for Windows and for both 32 and 64 bit systems.
At work I use an Intel Core 2 Quad CPU (Q9400) running @ 2.66Ghz... At home I have an i7 with 32 gigs of ram running an Ubuntu 12.10 linux distro...
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Some of the drawbacks to a VM is lack of multi-monitor support (I have an old monitor I use as a second and it helps tremendously when making videos and programming) and the obvious graphics acceleration and GPU codec compression offered by my graphics card.
I tried most of the VMs out there. VirtualBox seems best for Linux and the free VMware player seems to be the most responsive in Windows.
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Some of the drawbacks to a VM is lack of multi-monitor support (I have an old monitor I use as a second and it helps tremendously when making videos and programming) and the obvious graphics acceleration and GPU codec compression offered by my graphics card.
I tried most of the VMs out there. VirtualBox seems best for Linux and the free VMware player seems to be the most responsive in Windows.
I see. I rarely do video edits.
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How do you install such a configuration- Is that a "bare metal hypervisor" ? Which one do you use ?
Can each "head" can run on your configuration almost as fast as a native OS ?
Bare metal would be best.
But virtualbox is not.
You install it like any other software.
Headless means no keyboard, no mouse, no monitor.