On Tue, June 4, 2013 9:56 am, Jimmy Sjölund wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 4, 2013 at 2:18 AM, Len Ovens wrote:
>
>>
>> A good description of a video workflow for those of us who don't know
>> anything about it would be very useful. In fact a documentation of the
>> video work flow for those starting out i
On Wed, Jun 5, 2013 at 3:46 PM, Len Ovens wrote:
> I would assume you are using more than one camera if you are taking shots
> of different instruments all in one take. Unless they are all the same
> make and model of camera, the sync from audio to video may be different
> from camera to camera.
yway) program material (even bluray 192 sample
> rate stuff) that has 80khz content anyway. Any of the mics one can buy
> start to roll of around 18hz (even condenser mics). So any signals above
> that are artificially created. Buy some analogue test equipment and test
> it for yourself
Am 05.06.2013 11:34, schrieb edmund:
> On Wed, 05 Jun 2013 01:21:19 +0200
> Hartmut Noack wrote:
>
>> Am 04.06.2013 02:43, schrieb Len Ovens:
>>>
>>> On Mon, June 3, 2013 8:02 am, edmund wrote:
>>>
What are you calling "uncommon" sample rates? Ubuntu Studio is for
multi media and in my
one can buy
start to roll of around 18hz (even condenser mics). So any signals above
that are artificially created. Buy some analogue test equipment and test
it for yourself. See what the highest frequency is that you can import and
export with your sound card. There is an audible difference, but it
On Wed, June 5, 2013 12:32 am, Jimmy Sjölund wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 4, 2013 at 11:01 PM, Hartmut Noack
> wrote:
>
>>
>> > 4) I have sync all the videos to the music file. To do this in Mac or
>> > Windows the video editor often support scrubbing, so you can pinpoint
>> the
>> > audio in the current
On Wed, 05 Jun 2013 01:21:19 +0200
Hartmut Noack wrote:
> Am 04.06.2013 02:43, schrieb Len Ovens:
> >
> > On Mon, June 3, 2013 8:02 am, edmund wrote:
> >
> >> What are you calling "uncommon" sample rates? Ubuntu Studio is for
> >> multi media and in my case High res audio. Here we use 96 kHz an
On Tue, Jun 4, 2013 at 11:01 PM, Hartmut Noack wrote:
>
> > 4) I have sync all the videos to the music file. To do this in Mac or
> > Windows the video editor often support scrubbing, so you can pinpoint the
> > audio in the current video with the same spot in the song. Kdenlive does
> > not suppo
Am 04.06.2013 02:43, schrieb Len Ovens:
>
> On Mon, June 3, 2013 8:02 am, edmund wrote:
>
>> What are you calling "uncommon" sample rates? Ubuntu Studio is for
>> multi media and in my case High res audio. Here we use 96 kHz and 192
>> kHz sample rates.
Of course I have recorded in these samplera
On Wed, Jun 5, 2013, at 12:40 AM, Kaj Ailomaa wrote:
> What would a live user require from a video player?
>
> - It should be able to play as many formats as possible, naturally.
> - streaming over network?
> - what else?
>
> I don't use video players myself much fo
What would a live user require from a video player?
- It should be able to play as many formats as possible, naturally.
- streaming over network?
- what else?
I don't use video players myself much for else than playing simple video
files, so I'm not an expert on this subject.
We woul
Am 04.06.2013 18:56, schrieb Jimmy Sjölund:
> On Tue, Jun 4, 2013 at 2:18 AM, Len Ovens wrote:
>
>>
>> A good description of a video workflow for those of us who don't know
>> anything about it would be very useful. In fact a documentation of the
>> video work flow for those starting out in video
On Tue, Jun 4, 2013 at 2:18 AM, Len Ovens wrote:
>
> A good description of a video workflow for those of us who don't know
> anything about it would be very useful. In fact a documentation of the
> video work flow for those starting out in video creation would be
> fantastic.
>
>
As I wrote befor
Am 04.06.2013 05:25, schrieb lukefro...@hushmail.com:
> A video player is a prerequisite to video editing,
A player is a prequisite for KDEnlive also, that is: a dependency,
normally KDEnlive also recommends VLC, others want Mplayer to be
installed. So a capable Player should be installed with KDE
started out making VideoSongs for my recorded music. I have tried
out some different video editing software but made the last ones in
Kdenlive. I don't know about the "normal" video creation workflow since I'm
still learning by reading tutorials and a lot of trial and error. But
c
A video player is a prerequisite to video editing, as you must be able to play
your own rendered files and the clips you make them from. If posting them to
a video site like Liveleak, Flash in the browser is also needed, to check that
the upload works.
The videos I make are done like this:
1: co
On Mon, June 3, 2013 8:02 am, edmund wrote:
> What are you calling "uncommon" sample rates? Ubuntu Studio is for
> multi media and in my case High res audio. Here we use 96 kHz and 192
> kHz sample rates.
> VLC player, seems to play these formats too but it doesn't!
> When I play a 80 kHz sine it
nt video types I try to launch.
> Like
> HZN I end up with mplayer and VLC, but to quickly check my own recorded
> videos Xine does the trick.
I have also found I end up loading most of the video players I can find
just to play whatever I find to download. Xine has been the oldest and
m
On Sun, June 2, 2013 11:58 am, Hartmut Noack wrote:
> Am 02.06.2013 17:23, schrieb Len Ovens:
>> In the mean time, Parole (like thunar) has been fixed and works on
>> anything I have tried it on.
>>
>> We should perhaps switch back to Parole,
>
> Most people, that want a videoplayer that works fo
Am 03.06.2013 18:33, schrieb ttoine:
> But on Linux, Windows, or BeOS ??
Well... and what do you ask exactly?
It would be of much help, if you could answer using the usual methods to
cite E-Mails...
best regards
HZN
>
>
> Antoine THOMAS
> Tél: 0663137906
>
>
> 2013/6/3 edmund
>
>> On Mon
But on Linux, Windows, or BeOS ??
Antoine THOMAS
Tél: 0663137906
2013/6/3 edmund
> On Mon, 03 Jun 2013 17:06:51 +0200
> Hartmut Noack wrote:
>
> > Am 03.06.2013 17:02, schrieb edmund:
> > > On Mon, 03 Jun 2013 15:45:29 +0200
> > > Hartmut Noack wrote:
> > >
> > >> Am 03.06.2013 13:22, schri
On Mon, 03 Jun 2013 17:06:51 +0200
Hartmut Noack wrote:
> Am 03.06.2013 17:02, schrieb edmund:
> > On Mon, 03 Jun 2013 15:45:29 +0200
> > Hartmut Noack wrote:
> >
> >> Am 03.06.2013 13:22, schrieb edmund:
> >>> On Mon, 3 Jun 2013 12:09:38 +0200
> >>> ttoine wrote:
> >>>
> >>> I am strongly aga
Am 03.06.2013 17:02, schrieb edmund:
> On Mon, 03 Jun 2013 15:45:29 +0200
> Hartmut Noack wrote:
>
>> Am 03.06.2013 13:22, schrieb edmund:
>>> On Mon, 3 Jun 2013 12:09:38 +0200
>>> ttoine wrote:
>>>
>>> I am strongly agaist it.
>>> VLC uses closed/hidden codecs not vailable for other programs an
On Mon, 03 Jun 2013 15:45:29 +0200
Hartmut Noack wrote:
> Am 03.06.2013 13:22, schrieb edmund:
> > On Mon, 3 Jun 2013 12:09:38 +0200
> > ttoine wrote:
> >
> > I am strongly agaist it.
> > VLC uses closed/hidden codecs not vailable for other programs and
> > therefore alone it should not be used
Antoine THOMAS
Tél: 0663137906
2013/6/3 Hartmut Noack
> Am 03.06.2013 13:22, schrieb edmund:
> > On Mon, 3 Jun 2013 12:09:38 +0200
> > ttoine wrote:
> >
> > I am strongly agaist it.
> > VLC uses closed/hidden codecs not vailable for other programs and
> > therefore alone it should not be used
Am 03.06.2013 13:22, schrieb edmund:
> On Mon, 3 Jun 2013 12:09:38 +0200
> ttoine wrote:
>
> I am strongly agaist it.
> VLC uses closed/hidden codecs not vailable for other programs and
> therefore alone it should not be used at all.
What would that be? Cannot find any blobs in the source-downlo
On Mon, 3 Jun 2013 12:09:38 +0200
ttoine wrote:
I am strongly agaist it.
VLC uses closed/hidden codecs not vailable for other programs and
therefore alone it should not be used at all.
In addtion to that it fucks up the sample rate on a regular basis if
one wants to use music with other then the
VLC is imho the best player we can find for Ubuntu Studio users. It can
read everything from everywhere, on nearly all drivers (jack, and more
included).
If we should replace the default multimedia player for a serious one in
Ubuntu Studio, I am for VLC.
Antoine THOMAS
Tél: 0663137906
2013/6/3
On Sun, June 2, 2013 10:43 am, lukefro...@hushmail.com wrote:
> One more thing about Xine: In a default install of Ubuntustudio, I was
> able to play H264/mp4 video in Xine without installing extra codecs,
> thanks to the ffmpeg version used.
>
> If there is a policy that gstreamer-ffmpeg can't be
Am 02.06.2013 22:24, schrieb Jimmy Sjölund:
> I'm back to using US 12.04 and Parole was not installed. I prefer Xine
> because lukefromdc already wrote, it just works but both Parole and Totem
> need the gstream-ffmpeg as well as other codecs to be downloaded just to
> play my own iPhone recorded v
I'm back to using US 12.04 and Parole was not installed. I prefer Xine
because lukefromdc already wrote, it just works but both Parole and Totem
need the gstream-ffmpeg as well as other codecs to be downloaded just to
play my own iPhone recorded videos. While that's no issue for me I think
it's bet
Am 02.06.2013 17:23, schrieb Len Ovens:
> A few releases ago when we switched to xfce, we got the default Xubuntu
> video player Parole. At the time we found Parole didn't know how to set
> the aspect ratio and so we added totem instead. With the thought that it
> was what most of Ubuntu used. Some
One more thing about Xine: In a default install of Ubuntustudio, I was
able to play H264/mp4 video in Xine without installing extra codecs,
thanks to the ffmpeg version used.
If there is a policy that gstreamer-ffmpeg can't be shipped by default but
the underlying ffmpeg can be, that's inconsis
A few releases ago when we switched to xfce, we got the default Xubuntu
video player Parole. At the time we found Parole didn't know how to set
the aspect ratio and so we added totem instead. With the thought that it
was what most of Ubuntu used. Somehow we have ended up with Xine installed
as well
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