Czy ktoś z Was nagrywa swoje biurko z rzutem z góry?
Szukam dobrego uchwytu, które utrzyma na wysięgniku foto sprzęt o wadze ~1,5 kg.
Obecnie próbowałem z Elgato Master Mount L wraz z jednym krótkim uchwytem Flex Arm i ledwo to się trzyma. Trudno ustawić i utrzymać sprzęt na odpowiednim ustawieniu.
Shutter Encoder is a new free GPL app (donationware optionally) that is a front-end to ffmpeg. It's kind of like Handbrake, or Avidemux, or LosslessCut, but with a lot more ffmpeg options exposed. Available for Mac, Win, and Linux.
It is a pity that #Peertube has never been well integrated with #Microblogging. The primary way we become aware of a #video is when someone drops the URL in a toot, and we open it in a separate tab. We watch while not logged into the particular @peertube instance, thus not giving likes and having interesting discussions in the comments section.
@itsfoss In fact, I've been using #Raspi4, 8GB a couple of years as a #desktop computer. works like a charm. No, I do not #video editing and the like but every other task you would expect in your daily work without problems.
@lardmotel is Tom Ellard who was a member of the Australia experimental electronic music group SEVERED HEADS. Tom has done many things over the years and is an amazingly creative person in #electronicmusic, #video#synthesis and #art
He likes the idea of the #fediverse follow and engage with Tom
Here’s a better list of what’s affected when you change the frame rate of an existing project:
• Guide locations are wrong (offset by a certain amount). If there was a way to group all guides and move them together it would be a five-second fix (or if Kdenlive did this automatically so they were correct to begin with). As is, it’s a laboriuous process of moving each guide separately.
PS. One thing that caught me out: the default project setting was for 1080 resolution at 25fps. Make sure you set it to 30 (or 60 if you’re a gamer, I guess) if you need to and not get caught out like I did as changing the FPS on an existing project throws out all your timings for effects, etc.
If you’re working in Kdenlive, guides are your friend. As are the razor, slip, and ripple tools (take a moment to really learn them and you’ll save yourself a lot of time).
Also, the alt+arrow keys for navigating between clips on the timeline and ctrl+arrow keys for navigating between guides.
Finally, useful filters: Everything in Motion, Volume and Dynamics (audio fades, etc.), Alpha, Mask, Keying → Obscure (pixellate sensitive stuff).
So, thanks to all the replies, I’ll be redoing a bunch of my work tomorrow using OBS.
So, in short: if you want to record screencasts and you care about the quality of your work: DO NOT USE THE BUILT-IN GNOME SCREEN RECORDER. It outputs low quality videos and you cannot change the qualiy.
FFS, GNOME! Just wasted a day of editing video because the built-in screen recorder records screencasts at such a low quality that I ended up with keyframe artefacts / ghosting in my captures.
Bloody hell…
And is there any way to set the quality? Is there ever!
Anyone know a screen recording tool for Linux that saves *high-quality* videos.
(Don’t use GNOME’s built-in screen recorder if you’re posting HD+ videos.)