![]() ![]() I usually have the out video codex and audio codex set to Copy. Then I drag a file or files to the avidemux window. I find that cutting with avidemux is very easy. And the latest versions seem to have -if not as simple as Cut-Assistant- a very useful method for working with cut-clips. And there being a 32-bit version, a couple 32-bit Puppys.īut LosslessCut seems to run well. As is currently usual, I'm running Bionicpup64 and the both versions 6.0 and 5.0.5 segfault. Because it then occurred to me that maybe either VidCutter or LosslessCut might already have that function. As you're not changing codecs or resizing, it occurred to me that if you named each cut alpha-numerically as you went along, it is likely that a simple bash-script could be used to concat the individual clips. The thing is that as you are working you give names to the cuts and will generally have a good idea of where each cut will be in the finished product: most often just chronologically following the previous cut you made. With avidemux, after you've made your cuts you have to manually select each to add it to what is to be the finished product. The one thing I missed with avidemux that Cut-Assistant provided was the how easy Cut-Assistant made merging cuts by generating a 'play-list' as you made the cuts. ".it all boils down to one thing, really.Getting so you know your software inside out". Well, the discussion got me thinking again. Not everyone wants to do things the same way, after all. And is why I always try to make available to the community as many software packages that work with Puppy as I can. ![]() That's why there will always be choices, and, as I'm sure you know, my personal motto where Puppy's concerned has always been "choice in all things". That of familiarity, and getting so you know your software inside out.to the point where you're comfortable with it, you enjoy using it, and you're 100% happy with the results you get. I think in all honesty, Mike, that whatever video-editing software you DO "settle down with" and become proficient at, it all boils down to one thing, really. Or if -as I did about cut-assistant- they offer some feature not available under Linux applications even if it turns out that they aren't functional when you hope that someone can figure out how to make them so. Mike, himself, has posted about some.īut do make sure that they do run under Wine report what limitations they have and, especially, if you're expected to pay for them. ![]() We do appreciate reports about programs which run under Wine. Import segments from: MP4/MKV chapters, Text file, YouTube, CSV, CUE, XML (DaVinci, Final Cut Pro)Įdit file metadata and per-stream metadataĪllow arbitrarily selecting which segments to export - fixes #682 #358Īdd context menu to segments (right click) #392ĭouble click segment to jump to cut start #392Īllow using any files as preview files (e.Unoo, Mike may have gotten up on the wrong side of the bed this morning. View segment details, export/import cut segments as CSV View ffmpeg last command log so you can modify and re-run recent commands on the command line Saves per project cut segments to project file Timeline zoom and frame/keyframe jumping for accurate cutting around keyframes Take full-resolution snapshots from videos in JPEG/PNG formatĪpply a per-file timecode offset (and auto load timecode from file)Ĭhange rotation/orientation metadata in videos Losslessly extract all tracks from a file (extract video, audio, subtitle and other tracks from one file into separate files) add music or subtitle track to a video file) ![]() Lossless stream editing: Combine arbitrary tracks from multiple files (ex. Lossless merge/concatenation of arbitrary files (with identical codecs parameters, e.g. Losslessly cut out parts of video/audio (for cutting away commercials etc.) Lossless cutting of most video and audio formats Everything is extremely fast because it does an almost direct data copy, fueled by the awesome ffmpeg which does all the grunt work. Or you can add a music or subtitle track to your video without needing to encode. It lets you quickly extract the good parts from your videos and discard many gigabytes of data without doing a slow re-encode and thereby losing quality. The main feature is lossless trimming and cutting of video and audio files, which is great for saving space by rough-cutting your large video files taken from a video camera, GoPro, drone, etc. LosslessCut aims to be the ultimate cross platform ffmpeg GUI for extremely fast and lossless operations on video, audio, subtitle and other related media files. LosslessCut - The swiss army knife of lossless video/audio editing ![]()
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