Cinelerra is a free non-linear video editing system for the GNU/Linux operating system. It is produced by Heroine Virtual, and is distributed under the GNU General Public License. Cinelerra also includes a video compositing engine, allowing the user to perform common compositing operations such as keying and mattes.
Cinelerra was first released August 1, 2002, and was based in part on an earlier product known as Broadcast 2000. Broadcast 2000 was withdrawn by Heroine Virtual in September 2001; Heroine Virtual cited legal liability concerns in the wake of litigation from the RIAA and MPAA and the costs involved in high-end video production.
Cinelerra is sometimes criticized for requiring too much computing power to run. Its authors counter that it is a professional program and that there are alternative programs for amateurs.
Other features may be found on its features list.
At the National Association of Broadcasters' 2004 Electronic Media Show, Cinelerra was awarded Bob Turner's "MAKING THE CUT" award. The award is given to "the best and most exciting postproduction products seen at the convention" *.
| Date | Releases |
| July 2, 2006 | Cinelerra 2.1 released |
| September 29, 2005 | Cinelerra 2.0 merged into a community SVN version. |
| September 12, 2005 | Cinelerra 2.0 released |
| January 18, 2005 | Cinelerra 1.2.2 merged into a community CVS version. |
| January 10, 2005 | Cinelerra 1.2.2 released |
| August 16, 2004 | Cinelerra 1.2.1 merged into a community CVS version. |
| August 8, 2004 | Cinelerra 1.2.1 released |
| May 11, 2004 | Cinelerra 1.2.0 released |
| February 17, 2004 | Cinelerra 1.1.9 merged into a community CVS version. |
| February 11, 2004 | Cinelerra 1.1.9 released |
| October 5, 2003 | Cinelerra 1.1.7 merged into a community CVS version. |
| August 11, 2003 | Cinelerra 1.1.7 released |
| May 12, 2003 | Cinelerra 1.1.6 released |
| April 29, 2003 | Cinelerra 1.1.5 code "forked" into a community CVS version. |
| August 1, 2002 | Cinelerra 1.0.0 released |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Cinelerra".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world