Pages

Monday, December 20, 2010

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Lightworks new Open Source NLE

 
The new Lightworks video editor beta is out for Windows.  Not sure how long until it's available for Linux, but it is out.  This is a very professional editor.  I still love Kdenlive, but this editor might be very useful for major productions on Linux in the future.

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Posting a script publicly

I found that any text I write in Gedit can be posted on Google Docs.  So here is my first unfinished mini script "Ice Cream".  I hope this works better, plus it's updated when I edit the script.

It's learning time

This is my new blog to chronicle my adventure into writing for film.  I've always wanted to be a film maker, but writing has never been my strong point.  So now I'm on a quest to learn all I can about screen writing and attempt to put an open source twist on the material.

Writing Tools:
I've gone over this problem several times.  CelTx is designed from the ground up for script writing, but for some reason feels rather limiting.  I don't plan on giving up on CelTx, but I think that Gedit might be a better suited tool for me.  I'm also fond of Gedit because the final files can be read in a standard web browser.

The Editing Software
For Open Film Making there are quite a few applications that will make Open Source film making possible.  The first ( other than the script software ) is the Non-Liner Video Editor.  There are several possible contenders but as of writing the most stable and robust is Kdenlive.  Kdenlive is an editor but it also has some basic compositing tools built in.  The compositing tools however are lacking.  Some compositing alternatives include Cinecutie and Blender.

Open Shot and Pitivi have some potental, especially Open Shot.  Open Shot has a much better compositor than Kdenlive, but Open Shot is missing a lot of very important features that we need for movie making.

The Theater/Forum
The first and probably most popular open forum on the Internet for videos and films is probably YouTube.  YouTube really needs little introduction.  However YouTube alone would not be in the spirit of Open Source.  So the inclusion of Archive.org and Blip.tv are a must.  Both sites my not be as well known as YouTube, but both sites allow free formats to be hosted.

So here we have it.  My first foray into writing and I'm going to do it publicly.