That is the weak point of linux in general, in my case I can't capture, edit and process DV video using linux, TS I doesn't even count. In windows I have virtualdub and avisynth (with plugins) to do whatever I need to process any capture type. Since I got to know Linux OS (your linux OS brand here) back in 1996 not much was made so you can switch 100% from windows to linux. Yes, today linux is much more easy to handle for a normal user, back in the days we had to compile the kernel at the installation process, compile your drivers and so on, but even today if you need some specific tools in Linux that is trivial in Windows like virtualdub, avisynth (others) you don't have it. Make a dual boot installation to use windows based tools to do your basic work. 2009/11/23 Juhana Sadeharju <kouhia@xxxxxxxxxxxx>: > > Is there a video editor which can be used to extract pieces > of video to file? Two of the editors in Ubuntu failed to load > the DVB TS streamfile, Kino converted it to DV format, and slowly. > That is bad. And I don't know what DV format is, and how to convert > it losslessly back to DVB TS format. > In any case, I got feeling basic tools are still missing from > Linux media software catalogue. I need the tool in my projects. > > Juhana -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html