On Wed, 2014-07-02 at 10:02 +0400, Louigi Verona wrote: > 1. Lightworks is for professional film and they use hardware that does > the sync, like timecode jamming. > > 2. You don't need that amount of accuracy. I know one German filmmaker who does everything using the computer software, IOW he isn't using several monitors, crossfade hand gear etc.. I don't remember, but he likely use a shuttle/jog wheel, resp. he hires people doing it for him. The Mac does control several professional Sony video recorders, so sync can be done in a completely other way, then when using software only. Btw. he also still owns something like this one: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filmschnitt#mediaviewer/Datei:Fotothek_df_pk_0000165_015.jpg His thingy is a little bit smaller, for a smaller film format and it includes a screen. Since Germany switched from analog to DVB-T, I haven't seen anything on television that was lip-sync. Proper audio-video sync is dated here ;). Likely it's lip-sync by the production, but seemingly the DVB-T receivers are unable to sync audio and video. So there's a little bit of truth in the statement "You don't need that amount of accuracy", but it's still a bad attitude for a company. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user