Hi, They both have alot of power under the hood. I think blender has a nicer interface tho. My problem with cinelerra-cv was that I couldn't cut the video track without also cutting the audio track. I tried for a couple of hours to get it to play nice but it seemed like the selection tool could not be made to work per track. Patrick Shirkey Boost Hardware Ltd Raffaele Morelli wrote: > I would say that the best tool on linux for manipulating video is > cinelerra, blender is a 3D modeler. > > cinelerra supports many video file formats other than the well known > DV,MPEG,AVI and has a lot of plugin to work with audio as well. > > -r > > > 2009/5/5 Eric Steinberg <eric.steinberg@xxxxxxxxx > <mailto:eric.steinberg@xxxxxxxxx>> > > Blender is not intuitive, nor is it a video file editor, but it is > the best tool on linux for manipulating video, and it does support > import of mpeg/avi/mov. Most jobs that you can do with a > cuts-only editor can be done in the sequencing window of Blender. > You probably won't find a time-stretch tool for video, as video > is frame-based (there is an "add to clip" feature in Quicktime Pro > on Mac OS that will do the job, but nothing similar on linux). > I've had the most success, other than Blender, with Kdenlive, > although only on 32-bit... > > The very best cheap (twenny bucks, yo) tool for this operation is > Quicktime Pro. Has anyone run the Windows version of Quicktime > Pro under WINE? Fixing sync issues is literally a two or three > step operation: > > 1. trim audio > 2. trim video > 3. add to clip > Done! > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > Linux-audio-user mailing list > Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user > _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user