Talk:Comparison of video editing software

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This page looks like a good idea to me.

I've added in FORscene. It runs in a web browser and (as well as editing) can publish to web and mobile phones, so is slightly different from the others in the list. It doesn't have an article at the moment, but feel free to add one. I am involved with FORscene so it would not appropriate for me to write the article! Stephen B Streater 18:43, 16 March 2006 (UTC)

Yes, I'll probably be adding to this article over time, so if you want to add the FORscene features, that would be great. I don't know what the supported formats are; you'll probably need to add new columns. --Baryonic Being 22:18, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
Why does the demo on the FORscene.net show "Clesh" in the title? Is Clesh really the application title or is FORscene? --tonsofpcs (Talk) 05:14, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
Clesh and FORscene use similar technology, but are designed for different markets. Clesh is a consumer version of FORscene, and has a demo on the web. FORscene has different versions for each professional market it is sold into:
  • Review option gives just one window and a navigation bar, to allow internet review of content
  • Logging version includes keyboard short cuts and ALE export
  • Editing version includes play and record windows with an active timeline which has more audio tracks than Clesh, as well as multiple tracks for subtitles etc
  • Publishing options including export of EDLs, XMLs to Avid / FCP and export of video to Video iPOD and the local machine via MPEG.
FORscene is sold directly to organisations via one-to-one demos, and includes training and optional machine configuration for better performance, and its demo account, as configured from day to day, has extra privileges and is password protected. If you like, we can add some FORscene guest accounts showing the range of options available in FORscene, with the extra buttons.Stephen B Streater 06:49, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
  • PS At some point, FORscene will have its own article, and this will make everthing clear. Stephen B Streater 07:06, 10 April 2006 (UTC)

For other people's reference, I am using this page to help me. --Baryonic Being 22:18, 16 March 2006 (UTC)

Contents

[edit] Supported formats

FORscene input and output formats differ.

Input formats include:

  • DV over Firewire (can be miniDV or DV-CAM)
  • Composite video
  • S-video
  • JPEG
  • all Windows Media Player supported formats (Windows XP uploader)
  • all QuickTime supported formats (Apple uploader)
  • 3gpp from mobile phones (can be uploaded over the air)
  • MPEG-4 from mobile phones (can be uploaded over the air)

Output formats include:

  • web pages containing video (which plays back on Windows, Macs and Linux using a Java player)
  • video for Symbian mobile phones (download over-the-air or via Bluetooth from another phone using FORmobile)
  • video for MIDP-1 Java enabled mobile phones (download over-the-air via the phone's WAP browser)
  • video for video iPOD
  • CMX3600 EDL format (a text file)
  • XML output for editing systems such as FCP (a text file)

This doesn't quite tally with the current format list. In a desktop application, files are usually edited in their native format. In FORscene, all input files are automatically converted into an internal FORscene format during uploading so they can be edited over the web - the original format may be unsuitable for a typical web connection. On publishing, the output is designed to play back over the web or on a moblie phone (or video iPod), which most of the input formats are also unsuitable for.

I haven't changed the list much (yet?) except to add camera phones, as most consumer video is shot on these nowadays.

Stephen B Streater 23:11, 16 March 2006 (UTC)

Yeah... Perhaps the supported formats isn't a good idea at all. It's clearly more complicated. For example, Apple's video editing apps support any format QuickTime does, which includes some AVI and MPEG files and not others, and it really depends upon codecs. So, I think I'll have to replace that section with something else... (keeping it here for posterity) --Baryonic Being 14:40, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
MPEG-4 Flash HDV DVCPRO HD Mini DV Uncompressed SD Uncompressed HD QuickTime WMV Camera phone
Adobe Premiere Pro Yes Yes Yes
Avid Xpress DV
Cinelerra
Final Cut Express No Yes No Yes No No Yes No
Final Cut Studio No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No
FORscene No for input for input for input for input for input for input for input Yes
iMovie Yes Yes No Yes No No Yes No
MainActor
Pinnacle Studio
MPEG-4 Flash HDV DVCPRO HD Mini DV Uncompressed SD Uncompressed HD QuickTime WMV


[edit] Something Else(TM)

Ideas for possible fields:

  • Full-screen playback
  • Timecode display
  • Scene detection
  • High Definition support
  • PSD import support
  • Deck control
  • Batch capture
  • Batch export
  • Multicam editing
  • Video tracks
  • Audio tracks
  • Non-destructive editing
  • Real-time performance
  • Compositing
  • Keyframing
  • Color correction
  • Slow/fast motion
  • Reverse motion

But I don't know how to split them into sections! [BB]


This list is going to be long, as new features are easy to add. I suggest splitting it into three main sections, dealing with

  1. where source material comes from
  2. how content can be edited
  3. how the finished video can be published and distributed.


[edit] Where you can get the data from

Primary sources

  • Camera phone video
  • Camera phone photographs
  • DV camera (requires real time processing)
  • DV tape machine
  • analogue video input (S-video or composite)


Secondary sources

  • QuickTime
  • Windows Media Player
  • JPEG files


[edit] What you can do with the material

Core features which you would see/use on any edit

  • Shuttle
  • Jog
  • Frame accurate editing
  • Real-time performance
  • Timeline editing
  • Storyboard editing
  • Number of video tracks
  • Number of audio tracks
  • Full-screen playback
  • High Definition support
  • Timecode display
  • Non-destructive editing
  • Hours of video capacity on a typical system (eg 100GB disc)


Additional features which will not be used all the time

  • Scene detection
  • Video levels
  • Audio levels
  • Subtitles
  • Graphics import
  • Effects (eg dissolve)
  • Color correction
  • Slow/fast motion
  • Reverse motion
  • Logging
  • Metadata
  • Metadata search
  • Undo levels
  • Multicam editing


[edit] How you can distribute the video for viewing

  • Hosted web page
  • DVD
  • Smartphone
  • Java phone
  • QuickTime
  • Windows Media Player
  • Timecode outputs eg EDL, XML for moving to another system


This (particularly the middle section on editing features) could need more slicing and dicing as the list of features will probably grow, but this moves it on a bit.

Stephen B Streater 22:07, 17 March 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Clesh

FORscene is in fact used by professionals and has a growing number of programmes broadcast on UK TV which were made using it. It recently won a Royal Television Society award for Technology.

Clesh is the consumer version of FORscene. It has no EDL/XML output, and no need for video logging keyboard shortcuts, as consumers don't tend to log their video in the detail required for professional productions. The main Clesh webiste is here, and the guest account is here.

I've added in Clesh in the market area: Clesh, the consumer version of FORscene, was launched recently with Tiscali. Stephen B Streater 16:58, 19 March 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Podcasting

Podcasts seem to be an interesting output format for video distribution.

Apple released their video iPod in 2005, and the availability of podcasts on Windows and Mac PCs via iTunes, web browsers and other RSS feeds is widespread. I've added podcasts as one of the output formats. I don't know how the other systems work, but when you publish with FORscene, the video automatically appears for subscribers eg in their iTunes.

You can subscribe to my video podcast here. Stephen B Streater 09:14, 2 May 2006 (UTC)

This page needs to be updated to Avid Xpress Pro HD. That is the comperable product to Adobe Premiere Pro, not Xpress DV.

[edit] Nero Vision not mentioned?

Nero Vision is a decent basic video editor part of the $99 Nero bundle. deserves a mention here imho

Is it notable (see WP:SOFTWARE)? If so, you could write an article on it. Stephen B Streater 17:14, 10 July 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Operating Systems

Please input what type of operating systems are supported by the products. I wasted money on Premiere Pro simply because of the misinformation on this page. Do not judge the world by american standards. -Izaak

Do not judge the world by american standards.

What does this have to do with anything concerning video editing software. Don't blame America for your misjudgement in solely trusting an OPEN SOURCE encyclopedia for information (especially concerning software where the is an abundance of information i.e. premiere.) I honestly can't believe how quickly SOME members of the international community blame America for stuff like this. P.S. Its people like you who are perpetuating the existence of the archetypal anti-american european.

[edit] Windows Movie Maker?

I think Windows Movie Maker should be listed; it's non-linear and free. I don't know enough about it to add it here. AxelBoldt 21:50, 10 September 2006 (UTC)

Done.--H.T. Chien / 眼鏡虎 (Discuss|Contributions) 06:13, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

[edit] removal of blender from list of NLE software

Blender is a 3d modeling and animation software and in no way should be considered as a NLE

  • Blender was the NLE for the Elephants Dream short, and is the NLE and Compositor for the feature animation Plumiferos http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0811021/ . It has been the NLE for a number of shorts and commercials. It is considered one of the few stable opensource NLEs available (Jahshaka and Heroine are notoriously crashy). It has color correction tools, compositing tools, particles, text/title animation tools, it does HD formats, has support for high dynamic range editing and for outputing to Cineon and OpenEXR. Blender is not only for modeling, animation and rendering, those are just its better known features. LetterRip 02:48, 30 October 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Hi-Def Formats - AVCHD?

Any chance of adding a column under the hi-def section for AVCHD support?

I don't know enough about the various software packages outside of Final Cut Studio and Adobe Premiere to do it myself...

TIA!

I agree AVCHD should be added, however it seems no softwares support this standard yet? Maybe a couple months later? --H.T. Chien / 眼鏡虎 (Discuss|Contributions) 19:03, 13 December 2006 (UTC)

[edit] 24p

Please post which applications can capture 24p video. The only one I know for sure can capture 24p is Adobe Premiere Pro. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 64.180.85.239 (talk) 21:46, 5 December 2006 (UTC).

Ulead MediaStudio Pro and Ulead VideoStudio also support 24p capturing.--H.T. Chien / 眼鏡虎 (Discuss|Contributions) 19:04, 13 December 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Hosted vs. Non-Hosted

The article distinguishes between "Web, not hosted" and "Web, hosted". The distinction is confusing to me. Could someone explain?

Thanks. CJF01 18:50, 13 December 2006 (UTC)

I'm not sure about it either. However in my opinion it might be:
  • Web, not hosted: support to generate web streaming video files but no video hosting service is provided with the software.
  • Web, hosted: support to generate web streaming video and a video hosting service is provided with the software.
If what I though is true then I think maybe someone who say Adobe is web hosted should confirm which video hosting service is with Adobe.--H.T. Chien / 眼鏡虎 (Discuss|Contributions) 19:09, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
Some systems produce files which are stored automatically on a web server and can be accessed through a web browser on a web page - ie are hosted. Others produce files which the user must find his own web serving solution for - ie are unhosted. This is the differemce. Stephen B Streater 21:47, 4 February 2007 (UTC)

[edit] LiVES

I've added LiVES, since it was missing. --213.129.227.107 18:13, 1 March 2007 (UTC)