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Republic of The Philippines

This document provides information on several free and open-source video editing software programs, including OpenShot Video Editor, Kdenlive, VideoLAN Movie Creator, and Wondershare Filmora. It describes key features of each program such as supported formats, editing tools, effects, and platforms supported. Details are provided on the origins and maintenance of Kdenlive and development history of VEGAS Pro.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
53 views3 pages

Republic of The Philippines

This document provides information on several free and open-source video editing software programs, including OpenShot Video Editor, Kdenlive, VideoLAN Movie Creator, and Wondershare Filmora. It describes key features of each program such as supported formats, editing tools, effects, and platforms supported. Details are provided on the origins and maintenance of Kdenlive and development history of VEGAS Pro.

Uploaded by

Jovilson Manuel
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Republic of the Philippines

Isabela State University

Echague, Isabela

Institute of Information and Communication Technology

Multimedia Systems

Submitted by: Marialyn Fe S. Martinez

Submitted to: Wendell Castillo

Date: August 23, 2017


OpenShot Video Editor is a free and open-source video editor for FreeBSD, Linux, macOS,
and Windows. The project was started in August 2008 by Jonathan Thomas, with the objective
of providing a stable, free, and friendly to use video editor.[1][4][5][6][7][8]
OpenShot's core video editing functionality is implemented in a C++ library, libopenshot.
OpenShot uses the Qt toolkit and offers a Python API.[9]
OpenShot supports commonly used codecs that are supported
by FFmpeg like WebM (VP9), AVCHD (libx264), HEVC(libx265), and audio codecs
like mp3 (libmp3lame) and aac (libfaac). The program can render MPEG4, ogv, Blu-
ray and DVDvideo, and Full HD videos for uploading to internet video websites.

Kdenlive (KDE Non-Linear Video Editor) is a free and open-source video editing
software based on the MLT Framework, KDE and Qt. The project was started by Jason Wood in
2002, and is now maintained by a small team of developers.[4] With the release of Kdenlive
15.04.0 it became part of the official KDE project.
Kdenlive packages are freely available for Linux, FreeBSD, and Microsoft Windows, and the
source code is available under the terms of GNU General Public License version 2 or any later
version.

KDE's Kdenlive makes use of MLT, Frei0r effects, SoX and LADSPA libraries. Kdenlive
supports all of the formats supported by FFmpeg or libav (such
as QuickTime, AVI, WMV, MPEG, and Flash Video, among others), and also
supports 4:3 and 16:9aspect ratios for both PAL, NTSC and various HD standards,
including HDV and AVCHD. Video can also be exported to DVdevices, or written to
a DVD with chapters and a simple menu.[7][8]

Kdenlive has multi-track editing with a timeline and supports an unlimited number of video
and audio tracks.
Tools to create, move, crop and delete video clips, audio clips, text clips and image clips.
Configurable keyboard shortcuts and interface layouts.
A wide range of effects and transitions. Audio effects include normalization, phase and pitch
shifting, limiting, volume adjustment, reverb and equalization filters as well as others. Video
effects include options for masking, blue-screen, distortions, rotations, colour tools, blurring,
obscuring and others.
Ability to add custom effects and transitions.
Rendering is done using a separate non-blocking process so it can be stopped, paused and
restarted.
Kdenlive also provides a script called the Kdenlive Builder Wizard (KBW) that compiles the
latest developer version of the software and its main dependencies from source, to allow
users to try to test new features and report problems on the bug tracker.[9]
Wondershare Filmora the easy-to-use and trendy video editing software that lets you ignite
your story and be amazed with results, regardless of your skill level. Filmora gives you a helping
hand to get started with any new movie project by importing and editing your video, adding
special effects and transitions and sharing your final production on social media, mobile device
or DVD. Check out the video below to get an overall idea about Filmora.

VideoLAN Movie Creator is a non-linear editing software for video creation based on libVLC
and running on Windows, Linux and Mac OS X! It is free software distributed under the terms of
the GPLv2.

VEGAS Pro is a video editing software package for non-linear editing (NLE) originally
published by Sonic Foundry, then by Sony Creative Software, now owned and run by Magix
Software GmbH.[3]
Originally developed as an audio editor, it eventually developed into an NLE for video and audio
from version 2.0. Vegas features real-time multitrack video and audio editing on unlimited
tracks, resolution-independent video sequencing, complex effects and compositing tools, 24-
bit/192 kHz audio support, VST and DirectX plug-in effect support, and Dolby Digital surround
sound mixing. Up to version 10, Vegas Pro runs on Windows 7, Windows 8, and Windows 10.
Version 11 dropped support for Windows XP, and version 12 is 64-bit only. Version 13
dropped Windows Vista support. On 24 May 2016, Sony announced that it sold Vegas (and most
of its "Creative Software" line) to MAGIX, who would continue supporting and developing the
software.

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