Tuesday, February 08, 2005

About Video Editing

Non-linear editing for film and television post production is a popular modern editing method. Video and sound are digitised to hard disks. After that, they can be manipulated with software such as Pinnacle Liquid, Avid, Final Cut Pro or Lightworks.
Compared to the linear method of tape to tape editing, non-linear editing offers the flexibility of
film editing with random access and easy project organisation. It is easy to make new versions nondestructively. Initially, only low resolution pictures could be digitised, as storage was limited and expensive. Broadcast quality and High defintion are now possible. The costs of the editing systems have dropped, bringing non-linear editing within reach of a domestic user with a good home computer.
The earliest non-linear film and video editors used
laserdisc storage, but were quickly superseded by editing systems that used computer disk storage and compressed video.
The elements of a computer-based non-linear editing system for video are a
computer with a video editing card or video capture card and video editing software. Digital video is imported into the computer through a firewire socket and analogue video is imported through composite sockets both of which are found on most video editing cards. Various editing tasks can then be performed on the imported video before it is saved, exported to another medium, or MPEG encoded for transfer to a DVD.

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