I was given an old DVD of a 80's movie. It came on a double-sided DVD and is two full length (1.5 hrs. roughly) movies. I wanted to put it on my server for viewing. I decided a single video would be smarter and easier to manage than a two-part movie.
Using Handbrake (highly recommended, BTW), I ripped the video off both sides of the DVD and was left with two 700-900 MB mp4 files. The blend looked easy enough as the first movie ended with a simple fade to black and then credits while the second movie began with the same intro as the first, with an additional fade to black before the opening scene. Easy and simple, right?
While I often use Handbrake, I have no real video editing experience or skills so I tried several tools. Much of my results are effected by my lack of skill in this area, but I thought it might be interesting to share and maybe I'll learn something.
KDENLIVE: Had a medium learning curve. I was immediately able to load the two mp4 files, but it took a bit to figure out that I had to "drag" them to the timeline. Once I accomplished that, it took me a half hour to figure out the best way to cut out the two short segments. Then, the first time I tried to export the new video, I got only the second half. I had apparently neglected to indicate the entire video when I choose to export it. The full length export took over 5 hours to save and the result was 9.4GB from two videos that were 1.6GB total. Turns out the video default settings are to export to 1920x1080 so it expanded the frame from 720x480 and put black bars on the sides. Clearly, one needs a day or two of going through all the settings before using this program. I'm going to try this again when I have time to see if I can get a better result.
LIGHTWORKS: Version 14. Had a long learning curve because the interface is as minimalist as I've ever seen. Almost all functions are hidden (no toolbar) and a right click brings up a context menu with available functions. I liked it. However, it has some serious issues. Mostly, after a half hour or so of figuring out how to use it, the export function quickly consumed all 16GB of my RAM and started into using swap. The export continued although the desktop became unusable. It was clearly progressing much faster during the export than KDENLIVE had, but half way through it aborted and crashed due to lack of memory. I have to assume this is a bug and will be worked out, but admittedly since I'm working with just over 3 hrs of video the file size may not be typical for this program. The other issue I had was there is no apparent way to direct where it saves it's project folders. It creates a new folder in your home and I could find no way to make it appear elsewhere. This is just poor programming IMO and a deal breaker for me. Too bad too, because it's beautiful to behold.
AVIDEMUX: An old project but still active. I had to add a repo to install it to my KDEneon install. Directions are here. Very simple compared to the other two. Not a full production tool, but simple and seemed to be the scale of what I needed. I was able to figure out how to cut the ends off my clips and save the two file separately. I used pass-through video and audio codec settings and got a similarly sized file this time. I had to learn about something called an "I-Frame". Apparently you must start your video on an I-Frame to avoid corruption. Luckily, the second movie had an I-Frame just after the opening credits (I assume by design) so this was only a minor detail. And a big plus - it has a "skip to next key frame" button so you can jump to the next correct frame. However, when adding in the second video, Avidemux was unable to save to a single MP4 file. It crashed every time until I selected MKV, then it saved it. I ended up using Handbrake to re-encode it as MP4. AVIDEMUX is not problem free, but simple to use for basic tasks. Also worth mentioning is MKV is the default format and there seems to be no way to change the default filetype for output. A manual selection is required every time you launch the program.
CONCLUSIONS: At my level, I'm better off without any of these programs unless absolutely necessary. The command line is much better for me, but when it comes to video, you sort of need a graphical interface. Just for fun, using Handbrake I re-encoded the huge 9.4GB file that Kdenlive left me with. Took about an hour and resulted in 4GB. Still way too large considering it's a 80's 4:3 format movie. I've done a small amount of audio editing using Audacity without near this much trouble. I suppose the added level of complexity when dealing with video is the source of much of my troubles.
Using Handbrake (highly recommended, BTW), I ripped the video off both sides of the DVD and was left with two 700-900 MB mp4 files. The blend looked easy enough as the first movie ended with a simple fade to black and then credits while the second movie began with the same intro as the first, with an additional fade to black before the opening scene. Easy and simple, right?
While I often use Handbrake, I have no real video editing experience or skills so I tried several tools. Much of my results are effected by my lack of skill in this area, but I thought it might be interesting to share and maybe I'll learn something.
KDENLIVE: Had a medium learning curve. I was immediately able to load the two mp4 files, but it took a bit to figure out that I had to "drag" them to the timeline. Once I accomplished that, it took me a half hour to figure out the best way to cut out the two short segments. Then, the first time I tried to export the new video, I got only the second half. I had apparently neglected to indicate the entire video when I choose to export it. The full length export took over 5 hours to save and the result was 9.4GB from two videos that were 1.6GB total. Turns out the video default settings are to export to 1920x1080 so it expanded the frame from 720x480 and put black bars on the sides. Clearly, one needs a day or two of going through all the settings before using this program. I'm going to try this again when I have time to see if I can get a better result.
LIGHTWORKS: Version 14. Had a long learning curve because the interface is as minimalist as I've ever seen. Almost all functions are hidden (no toolbar) and a right click brings up a context menu with available functions. I liked it. However, it has some serious issues. Mostly, after a half hour or so of figuring out how to use it, the export function quickly consumed all 16GB of my RAM and started into using swap. The export continued although the desktop became unusable. It was clearly progressing much faster during the export than KDENLIVE had, but half way through it aborted and crashed due to lack of memory. I have to assume this is a bug and will be worked out, but admittedly since I'm working with just over 3 hrs of video the file size may not be typical for this program. The other issue I had was there is no apparent way to direct where it saves it's project folders. It creates a new folder in your home and I could find no way to make it appear elsewhere. This is just poor programming IMO and a deal breaker for me. Too bad too, because it's beautiful to behold.
AVIDEMUX: An old project but still active. I had to add a repo to install it to my KDEneon install. Directions are here. Very simple compared to the other two. Not a full production tool, but simple and seemed to be the scale of what I needed. I was able to figure out how to cut the ends off my clips and save the two file separately. I used pass-through video and audio codec settings and got a similarly sized file this time. I had to learn about something called an "I-Frame". Apparently you must start your video on an I-Frame to avoid corruption. Luckily, the second movie had an I-Frame just after the opening credits (I assume by design) so this was only a minor detail. And a big plus - it has a "skip to next key frame" button so you can jump to the next correct frame. However, when adding in the second video, Avidemux was unable to save to a single MP4 file. It crashed every time until I selected MKV, then it saved it. I ended up using Handbrake to re-encode it as MP4. AVIDEMUX is not problem free, but simple to use for basic tasks. Also worth mentioning is MKV is the default format and there seems to be no way to change the default filetype for output. A manual selection is required every time you launch the program.
CONCLUSIONS: At my level, I'm better off without any of these programs unless absolutely necessary. The command line is much better for me, but when it comes to video, you sort of need a graphical interface. Just for fun, using Handbrake I re-encoded the huge 9.4GB file that Kdenlive left me with. Took about an hour and resulted in 4GB. Still way too large considering it's a 80's 4:3 format movie. I've done a small amount of audio editing using Audacity without near this much trouble. I suppose the added level of complexity when dealing with video is the source of much of my troubles.
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