The trick to cinelerra is treating a crash as a minor inconvenience
(which it is, the program is quite scrupulous about saving it's state,
so you never lose more then 1 mouse click worth of interaction, as
long as you remember to load the backup). Many places where a normal
program would give an error message, cinelerra simply segfaults - in
particular loading a file with a codec cinelerra cannot understand
(this is an issue especially because cinelerra can save to formats it
cannot load). Despite this issue (apparently a symptom of a lack of
developer time), cinelerra is a great program and well worth getting
to know.
On Sat, Nov 29, 2008 at 3:45 PM, Thomas Fisher <thomasfisher(a)ak.net> wrote:
On Saturday 29 November 2008 07:12:20 am Grammostola
Rosea wrote:
Dragan Noveski wrote:
Grammostola Rosea wrote:
Hi,
I've a dvd here with someone who is giving a presentation. But the
sound and video are not well synchronized (e.g. the mouth moves, the
sounds comes behind).
How can I fix this? With which apps?
Thanks in advance,
\r
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mplayer can do this.
cheers,
doc
Do you know how? I can't find it.
This is probably the result during the filming. Google on {Jay Rose) who is
a audio engineer and gives a lot of very good free info aand is the author of
some good books.
Cinelerra is a very powerful video editor in which the audio and the video
can be adjusted. Probably the audio track will need to be separated from the
video track. Mencoder and ffmpeg may be of use. Anticipate a steep learning
curve.
Tom
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