2009. 11. 23, hétfő keltezéssel 20.41-kor Wellington Terumi Uemura ezt írta: > 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. > There are plenty of good video tools under Linux. > 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. You are using the wrong tool. Kino is for DV (Sony miniDV camcorder format) only. > > In any case, I got feeling basic tools are still missing from > > Linux media software catalogue. I need the tool in my projects. > > Have you tried kdenlive, cinelerra, avidemux, gopchop, or dvbcut? (These latter two are made exactly for cutting out from MPEG-PS or MPEG-TS streams while maintaining the audio/video sync.) I recommend dvbcut, it works well for me. Levente -- 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