Recently in Web video Category

Cubicle karaoke – is your office like this?

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via the always-cutting-edge-if-it's-geeky BoingBoing

Ilene makes a video ... and you can, too

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This is total guerrilla video. Ilene made it with our many-years-old Casio 1.3-MP digital camera (which shoots .avi video) and edited it in iMovie on the iBook G4. (Follow Ilene on Twitter for tips on food, health, vegetarianism and avoiding eating stuff that can kill you.)

We output the iMovie "project" as a Quicktime video and then uploaded it to YouTube, which takes care of the Flash encoding.

This is no big deal if you're accustomed to dealing with video, but for a couple of people who don't do this all that often (or ever), it shows how relatively easy it is to shoot, edit and distribute a video with whatever 5+year-old equipment you happen to have laying around.

Where I'm going: My near-future plans for video entail trying to edit it in a FOSS environment, and that means looking at the various video-editing solutions for Linux and BSD.

I tend to favor software that's not in perpetual alpha mode, has a relatively large user base and isn't prone to crashing. I also favor cross-platform applications.

For this reason, I'm focusing on Blender, which is mainly for 3D animation but will also serve as a video editor.

At first glance, Blender appears to be an excellent project with an active community centered around an application that runs not just on Linux, Windows and Mac OS but also in OpenBSD, and probably every other BSD as well.

I have had Blender installed on both my OpenBSD and Ubuntu systems for the past many months but haven't yet figured out how to use it.

Cutting video with KDEnlive: If you're OK staying in Linux and using KDE apps, KDEnlive looks like it's shaping up to be an excellent video editor. There's currently no KDEnlive port for OpenBSD but there is a port in FreeBSD. (Even though I'm not running OpenBSD at this particular moment, I'm still keeping an eye on what will and won't run in it ...)

I'm very interested in following the progress on KDEnlive as it becomes a more "mainstream" portion of the KDE software bundle. I've said before that this is the one app that could bring me over to the KDE camp (I'm currently partial to GNOME and Xfce on the FOSS desktop). Not that you can't run a KDE app without the full KDE desktop, but it somehow seems so "wrong" (and yes, I should probably get help for this).

To that end, reader arochester sent me a link to this Nixie Pixel video about editing with KDEnlive.

UPDATED — HTML 5: What the <video> tag means to you

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Updated: A way better article than mine was written by Ryan Paul of Ars Technica.

The open-source community has been buzzing in recent weeks about the new HTML 5 Web markup specs and the new <video> tag, which initially promised a world in which proprietary formats such as Flash and Quicktime wouldn't dominate the Web space and could potentially give way to free (including royalty free) and open formats such as Ogg.

That way we wouldn't be beholden to Flash, which Adobe controls with a fairly iron fist; just try to create Flash content without purchasing an expensive app for a proprietary OS.

And what about all the non-Linux Unix-like operating systems limping along with no Flash at all?

Well, the various browser-makers are feuding over just how to implement the <video> tag and which formats to include.

If you ask me, and I hope you do, I think that video over the Web is a huge, huge problem. What if HTML and CSS weren't free and open formats and we had to pay royalties every time we used them? What if Javascript couldn't be included in browsers on all OSes? We're already in some deep water with audio, given that MP3 and Windows Media are royalty-encumbered formats.

Summing it up: Anything and everything that helps free, open formats such as Ogg Vorbis and Ogg Theora for audio and video is good for everybody. Why shouldn't we all individually own what's ours, in this case the multimedia we create on our own hardware?

Tech Talk column

Steven Rosenberg's weekly Tech Talk column, which appears Saturdays in the Los Angeles Daily News, is now available on the Daily News Technology page.

About this blog

New ways to sign in to comment: I just added the ability for prospective commenters on this blog to sign in using their AOL, Yahoo! and Wordpress.com accounts (for the past 200 posts anyway ... more than that will take an extensive, middle-of-the-night rebuild). That's in addition to the other sign-in choices, which include starting a Movable Type account on this blog, Typekey, OpenID, Live Journal and Vox. If you have trouble getting your Movable Type account verified, or any of the other sign-in options are not working properly, please e-mail me. With these added ways of signing in, there's more reason than ever for you to make a comment (or several!).




Steven Rosenberg aims to learn what he does not know. He writes about it here.



About this Archive

This page is a archive of recent entries in the Web video category.

KDEnlive is the previous category.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

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