Tuesday, October 12, 2010
How to Install Adobe Photoshop on Ubuntu Linux
Installing Adobe Photoshop on Ubuntu Linux is pretty easy. In this tutorial I will show you how to install Photoshop using Wine.Wine is a translation layer capable of running Windows applications on Linux operating system. Windows programs running in Wine act as native programs would, running without the performance or memory usage penalties of an emulator, with a similar look and feel to other applications on your desktop.
Steps To Install Photoshop in Linux
1. First install Wine in Linux.
2. Then right click on Adobe Photoshop Setup.exe and click Open with Wine Windows program loader.
3. The installation Process will start automatically.
4. That’s it you have successfully installed Adobe Photoshop in Linux.
5. Goto Applications –> Wine –> Programs –> Adobe Photoshop.
Running Windows applications on Linux made easy.
Checkout,
10 Most Wanted Ubuntu 10.04
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Make Your Text Files Password Protected With LockNote
Everybody use text files to save text data’s sometimes the data is confidential and non shareable with any one because they may contain Passwords, Credit Card numbers, Personal chat and many more. infact i have over 50 files which are fully loaded with my personal words passwords etc etc and i cant afford to show them to someone. Now i use LockNote and i am free of this tension at all, this small freeware utility is itself a little notepad and this software not only encrypt your documents also password protect them.
LockNote comes really useful you dont have to then worry about your private confidential data to be exposed and misused further.
LockNote works simply it open like notepad and works like notepad interface is white simple and encryption method is tough “AES 265-bit encryption” when you save text written in locknote it will then ask for password for file and the file will be encrypted and saved and when you’ll open the file again it will then ask for password to access text data simple easy but tough to break.
Download LockNote
Saturday, October 9, 2010
How to: Download Wikipedia and Use Offline
All you have to do is to Download an extension for firefox for that first you have to be using Firefox download here after that you’ll be able to install extension for it, Then click here and download Zipedia firefox extension. Zipedia lets you download the database of wikipedia and then use it while you are not connected to internet or on the go if you have laptop and no internet access with.
When you are done with installing Zipedia extension for Firefox then go to Tools > Add-ons > Zipedia > Options then click on generate zip and then you’ll asked to download wikipedia dump files download them and give path in zipedia options after that you’ll be able to download article of you choice in your language for offline browsing.
- Plugin Screenshot:
How to: Make Your IP Static
Sometimes you really need your IP to be static so it never changes, You can need a static ip for couple of situations and just want your ip to be same forever well now you can make your ip static even if your network dont let you select your IP you can do this very easily with a little free software.
Normally network assigns IP’s by itself with help of dhcp You may need to have a Static IP for several reasons for example you are planning to start a game server over your lan you’ll need to tell your ip to your friends so they can connect to you but you won’t be willing to tell your new ip everyday that looks noob, or maybe you are planning to make your machine a file sharing server with your friends or we say planning to host an ftp platform over your lan.
With the help of Simple Static IP you can easily assign a static ip for your computer with ease it will select any available IP over your LAN and will make it static for your forever you just have to press a button Enable Static IP

Download ‘Simple Static IP’
Normally network assigns IP’s by itself with help of dhcp You may need to have a Static IP for several reasons for example you are planning to start a game server over your lan you’ll need to tell your ip to your friends so they can connect to you but you won’t be willing to tell your new ip everyday that looks noob, or maybe you are planning to make your machine a file sharing server with your friends or we say planning to host an ftp platform over your lan.
With the help of Simple Static IP you can easily assign a static ip for your computer with ease it will select any available IP over your LAN and will make it static for your forever you just have to press a button Enable Static IP
Download ‘Simple Static IP’
How to: Access Blocked Websites and Services On Web
Are you sick of switching proxies and using online web proxies to access the content locked by your server administrator such as P2P or Torrents and want to hide your identity on the web, usually using free proxy enables you explore web while hiding your original identity, it hides your computer IP address or other information that might be confidential for you, sometimes switching proxies for many reason are annoying and online proxy websites don’t help everytime so here I come with a solution Tunnel your connection and with a little piece of software its easy more than ever and enables you to surf web anonymously and access content blocked by your server.
Normally tunnelling a connection is’t that too easy as it sounds Tunneling a connection manually is far more complicated process as I thought so I started search for a software that tunnels connection, even the tunnelling softwares were complicated and hard to understand but thanks god I found ‘Your Freedom’ a free software which let you tunnel your connection with almost 5 clicks in total. Connection Tunneling is a process in which all the incoming traffic and out going traffic is encrypted and decrypted at the same time software make direct connection to your server and simply starts encryption of incoming and outgoing signals and you have to set your browser proxy settings to 127.0.0.1 which is your own IP.
When you tunnelled a connection not your machine information is exposed to the web, even you can use blocked websites or any blocked services which your server may be repelling you to use. Its like if you are using Torrent which were not supposed to be used on your connection, Your admin will never come to know you are using torrents for him it will be normal http protocols requests.
Your Freedom’s interface is so simple on your first run a wizard will come up which will help you making things easier just put in your proxy address with which you connect to web means your Lan’s server IP (if you are not on lan and its direct connection leave the field blank) then select which protocols you want to be tunnelled http, https, udp etc etc then software will automatically start searching freedom servers this is the real part of this software it actually hide your real ip behind some other website’s ip like ask.com or google.com or which is most nearer and fastest for you. Now when server found you are good to go click next watch for the next last step.
The wizard is now asking you for Username and Password Goto Your Freedom Website and register for an account put in username and password and click finish you are now good to go tunneled, now click ‘start connection’ button on main software window and you are done now only browser proxy settings left set your Firefox or Internet Explorer to use IP 127.0.0.1 and port 8080 Now browse anonymously without any restrictions with freedom.
Note: you must have java runtime installed to use this software.
Free Online Alarm Clock
Wake up people kukuklok is here to wake you up. I just found an online Alarm Clock which helps you waking up or you can use it as reminder if you are sinking into your work just open it up into a tab set alarm and do your work.
The other idea from my side if you have troubles waking up just set up the alarm clock turn full volume of your speakers and go to sleep rest you know what will happen
you can select upto 3 different Alarm tones rooster, classic clock and digital clock it also works when you set up the alarm and remove the internet connectivity. Well kukuklok is so so simple i have nothing much to write about it you just give it a go yourself Goto Kukuklok website
The other idea from my side if you have troubles waking up just set up the alarm clock turn full volume of your speakers and go to sleep rest you know what will happen
How to: Know Web host of any Website
Knowing web host of any website is so easy with a free online utility named Whoishostingthis you just enter domain and hit ‘Search’ and in the next screen you see the name of web host used by that domain.
That’s it mystery unveiled Just as a side note TechieSouls is hosted by DownTownHost and I am really satisfied with the performance of DTH servers page load times are super fast and the support is really fast and the best from all They are not overselling like many other web hosts they show you bells and whistles saying everything is unlimited but they never tell you CPU/RAM usage isn’t unlimited.
How to Check if your Computer Supports ‘Hardware Virtualization’ in Linux
Yesterday I wrote about how to check if you computer supports Windows 7 XP mode. Today I am going to tell you how to check if your processor supports Hardware Virtualization under Linux. I already mentioned in this post that XP mode requires that your processor supports Hardware Virtualization. If you are switching to Windows 7 from Linux and you are sure that you’ll need to use XP mode then this post will guide you through.
If you are running your Linux under “Intel” based processor then open your terminal and paste the following command and then press enter.
If you are running your Linux under “Intel” based processor then open your terminal and paste the following command and then press enter.
if [ 'grep -c vmx /proc/cpuinfo' -ge 1 ]; then echo Supports Intel VT; else echo No Support for Intel VT; fiIf you are running your Linux under “AMD” based processor then open your terminal and paste the following command and then press enter.
if [ 'egrep -c '(vmx|svm)' /proc/cpuinfo' -ge 1 ]; then echo Supports VT; else echo No Support for VT; fi
How to Rip and Download MP3 File from Youtube Videos
There are a couple of easy ways to rip and download audio file from a Youtube video. With three following methods you can download mp3 file of your Youtube video but you only need to choose one out of three following methods.
- Listen To You Tube : is a tool which can generate downloadable link to the mp3 file from any video file. You just enter Youtube link to your desired video and LTYT will generate you an MP3 download link within a short while.
- Vixy.net : Vixy is a smart online tool, it let you convert youtube video in various formats .mp3, .avi, .mov, .3gp and .mp4. You just need to put your desired Youtube video link and choose which format you want to convert it.
- FLV Extract : is a downloadable desktop application for Windows It lets you rip mp3 audio out of any downloaded .FLV video. To rip audio first you need to download videos to your computer and there are many tools available for this purpose such as Easy YouTube Video Downloader Addon for firefox. This method works for many video websites such as metacafe, vimeo, etc.
Integrate ReShouts to Twhirl Desktop Client
ReShouts.com is the solution, Reshouts work like microblogging platform many active diggers joined it and now they (including me) are sharing dig stories here and there to let their friends know about their submissions. In this post I am about to tell you that how to integrate Reshouts with Twirl (popular twitter desktop client).
Well now you have full fledged ReShouts desktop client. Happy digging
1. First of all Download Twirl from here
2. Select “laconi.ca”
3. Enter your <Your Username>@diggshout.com
4. hit the “+”, then click “connect”
That’s it, you’re done.
5 Simple Ways to Speed Up Your Computer
We all want our computers to be fast. And there are a lot of ways to speed them up – you could upgrade your hardware (adding RAM is the easiest solution), use lots of Registry edits, disable various services, etc. But if you are looking for a fast and easy way to improve your computer speed and performance, here are 5 tips that will not harm your computer in any way and will make it run a lot faster.
1) Speed Up Windows Explorer
If you feel that Windows Explorer takes too much time to start, there is a thing you can do to speed it up. The reason it is slow if because Windows automatically looks for network files, shared folders, and devices when you start Windows Explorer. You can disable this option by doing the following:- Open Windows Explorer
- Click on Tools menu
- Then click on Folder Options
- Click on the View tab
- Find Automatically search for network folders and printers check box and uncheck it
- Click Apply, then OK
- Reboot
2) Optimize Appearance Settings
If performance is the highest priority for you, I’d recommend optimizing appearance setting, because all those visual effects that we are so used waste system resources. Some people think that it’s only the graphics card that has to deal with it all. Wrong – CPU and RAM are affected as well. And Vista is even worse in this respect, because its graphics are more advanced and slow down your PC a lot.Luckily it’s very easy to configure XP for best performance by reducing unneeded visual effects:
- Go to Start – Settings - Control Panel
- In the Control Panel click System and go to Advanced tab
- In the Performance Options window select Adjust for best performance
- Click OK and close the window
- Show shadows under menus
- Show shadows under mouse pointer
- Show translucent selection rectangle
- Use drop shadows for icons labels on the desktop
- Use visual styles on windows and buttons
There is absolutely no need to have device drivers left if the device itself was uninstalled. You don’t want those drivers to waste system resources, right? Because anyway you don’t need them anymore. This happens because you install its drivers when installing a device, and those drivers get called each time you boot up your PC. The bad thing is that even when the device has been uninstalled, the drivers are still there and your system continues to load them at boot up.
To get rid of them:
1. Press the Windows key + the Break key on your keyboard to open the System Properties box
2. Select the Advanced tab
3. Click Environmental Variables
4. Under System variables click New
5. In the variable box type devmgr_show_nonpresent_devices
6. Type 1 in the variable value text box
7. Click Ok and return to the System Properties box
8. Click Ok again
9. Go to the Device Manager tab
10. Click View – Show hidden devices
Then you need to expand all branches and search washed out icons – they show unused drivers that you can remove. To remove a driver, highlight it, right-click on it, and select Remove. Be careful though, because you don’t want to delete any used drivers! So make sure you delete ONLY washed out icons.
4) Remove Software You Don’t Need
Most people like trying out new software. So, we download programs, install them, and… sometimes never use them at all. Why keep them then? Because having too many applications makes your computer slow on starup. Go to Start – Settings – Control Panel – double-click Add/Remove Programs.Check which programs you don’t need and get rid of them.
When Uninstalling Software Fails
Sometimes removing software can cause problems. A very common one is that some programs leave some data behind and your system gets cluttered with junk files.
And sometimes the uninstaller doesn’t work at all. But not to worry – you can always remove the software manually. What you will have to do is find the folder where the program is installed. Usually it’s the Program Files directory. Find the software folder and delete it. If some files don’t want to be deleted, try restarting your computer. This will help if the files were used by the system. If you still can’t remove those files, try booting in Safe Mode (tap F8 during PC boot) and then delete the files.
After that you need to get rid of invalid Registry entries. Microsoft has a free Windows Installer CleanUp Utility to help you do that. Install and open it and then select the program you want to uninstall from the list. The utility will remove all registry entries related to that application. I suggest backing up the Registry before you do this. Just in case.
Another way to cleanup the Registry is to use a third party Registry cleaner. Always be careful and use ONLY well-known and trusted software that has received positive user reviews. There are lots of programs that say they are great, but in reality they can do more harm than good.
A very simple way to uninstall programs without having to worry about it at all is to use a software uninstaller. Those uninstallers find and remove all entries related to the software you are uninstalling and get rid of it all in one go.
A good program for that is Auslogics BoostSpeed, because it contains both an uninstaller and a Registry cleaner, plus lots of other useful utilities to optimize and protect your system.
5) Disable Indexing Services
Indexing can be useful, but can also make your computer slow and loud, as it takes up RAM and makes the hard drive thrash. This service is used to update the lists of all the files that are on your computer, so that you can search for files faster. Disabling it will make your search a bit slower, but your computer a lot faster. I recommend disabling it.- Go to Start - Settings – Control Panel
- Double-click Add/Remove Programs
- Click Add/Remove Windows Components
- Uncheck Indexing Services
- Click Next and then click Finish
Thursday, October 7, 2010
Google Talk video & voice chat FINALLY comes to Linux
It’s raining where I am but the sun is most certainly shining in my head: Gtalk users on Linux can finally use both voice and video chat. Adding such support has been Google’s top video chat request
Head over to Gmail.com/videochat to download the plugin. It’s even packaged up in a neat .deb!
So, why the wait? Google engineer Justin Uberti talks about the trouble the Linux port posed: "This release required significant engineering to develop an all-new video rendering solution and an all-new PulseAudio-based audio handler, along with work to support 64-bit and countless webcam compatibility tests. We spent a lot of effort to make it fully feature-complete, with all the same goodies as the Windows and Mac versions, and we’re happy to now support Google voice and video now on all major desktop platforms."
For SUSE or Fedora users wanting a slice of the action fear not – he also says that “[they’re] planning on adding RPM support soon as well.”
Source By : http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk
Head over to Gmail.com/videochat to download the plugin. It’s even packaged up in a neat .deb!
So, why the wait? Google engineer Justin Uberti talks about the trouble the Linux port posed: "This release required significant engineering to develop an all-new video rendering solution and an all-new PulseAudio-based audio handler, along with work to support 64-bit and countless webcam compatibility tests. We spent a lot of effort to make it fully feature-complete, with all the same goodies as the Windows and Mac versions, and we’re happy to now support Google voice and video now on all major desktop platforms."
For SUSE or Fedora users wanting a slice of the action fear not – he also says that “[they’re] planning on adding RPM support soon as well.”
Source By : http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk
Video editing in Linux: a look at PiTiVi and Kdenlive
By Joe Brockmeier |
Video editing on Linux has long gotten a bad rap. A few years ago, the only real options for video editing were either deeply limited in features and polish, or incredibly complex to set up and use.
While Linux still lacks a direct competitor to tools like Apple's iMovie or Final Cut Pro, the current crop of video editing tools are much more capable and easy to use. Two tools in particular stand out: PiTiVi and Kdenlive. Both suites are under active development and look promising. In this article, we'll take a look at what both of these tools can and can't do.
What a video editor needs
You should be able to count on a base set of features from any video editor that's worth its salt. At a bare minimum, any video editor should be able to import a wide range of formats, edit video and audio in a non-linear fashion, provide transitions and titling, allow multiple sources for video and audio, and be intuitive enough that it doesn't require a week's worth of training to become productive.
Ideally, an application would go a bit farther than that and also provide effects to adjust color balance, enhance the image, or just improve the raw video.
The latest version of PiTiVi is 0.13.3. As the version number suggests, it's early on in development and not quite fully baked. The version number reflects features implemented, however, and not stability. In my time working with PiTiVi, it was stable and I did not encounter any serious bugs.
Import works fairly well with PiTiVi, though some formats may be problematic depending on which Gstreamer plugins you're using. For instance, I grabbed RiP: A Remix Manifesto in Ogg Theora and in Apple Quicktime format (H.264). PiTiVi happily imported both formats, but only recognized the video channel when importing from Quicktime. This also was the case when importing movies from an iPhone. Importing some of my Ogg tracks from Magnatune for audio worked just fine.
After doing a bit of detective work (which is to say actually reading through the manual) I found this was due to its use of the Fluendo Gstreamer codecs. Apparently, the Fluendo Gstreamer plugins work well for playback, but not editing. If you're using the "ugly" Gstreamer plugins instead, MP3 import seems to work just fine, but still no luck with Quicktime.
The actual act of importing materials is dead easy. Just drag a file into the PiTiVi Clip Library or use the dialog to snag them from your file system. That is, if you have them on your system.
Right now, PiTiVi only supports importing from files—it doesn't support importing video from a camcorder over Firewire (IEEE 1394) connection. This is rather unfortunate, as many users are going to expect and want to work with a comprehensive application to import and edit video. If you're using a flip cam that generates a usable file format, it's not a problem, but if you have a camcorder, it's a bit of a headache. Support for this is planned for future releases, but isn't yet in stable versions of PiViTi.
One small thing PiTiVi does that is particularly useful when adding clips to a project—it shows the video and audio channels separately by default, and allows you to edit them separately.
PiTiVi's performance gave me no complaints. The user interface is snappy at all times, and was never laggy or left me twiddling my thumbs while waiting for file imports or when moving around fairly large pieces of video and audio.
Working with source materials is straightforward. Just drag the video and/or audio clips into the bottom timeline. You can drag clips around to arrange them in any order you like.
The toolbar at the bottom of the PiTiVi interface allows you to cut clips, merge or link two or more clips, and group clips together (such as audio and video clips). It shouldn't take more than five to ten minutes to get the hang of PiTiVi's editing capabilities, especially since the feature set is so limited.
Most of PiTiVi's operations can be performed from the keyboard. For instance, the arrow keys allow you to step through frames one at a time, which makes it much easier to find exactly the right frame. The space bar starts playback, Ctrl-R calls the "Razor" tool to make a cut—though it seems you must use the mouse to actually perform the cut.
At the moment, PiTiVi lacks markers—the ability to set any markers throughout the project. Markers can be useful in providing visual cues when working on a project for key points in video clips that you might want to use while editing. Again, the documents indicate this is a planned feature, but it was not implemented in the stable release.
Basically, PiTiVi is missing the ability to do anything other than re-arrange source materials. There's no way to do even a simple wipe or overlay to transition between scenes in a project. Captioning the video or providing titles isn't possible within PiTiVi either. This means that PiTiVi is unsuitable for any sort of professional work, and probably isn't full-featured enough for many amateur video editors either.
It is possible to import static graphics into PiTiVi, such as PNGs. This can be used to provide credits and some very rudimentary wipes for projects, but isn't a real substitute for the actual features.
Rendering the final output with PiTiVi is straightforward. Once editing is finished, just click the "Render Project" button, tweak the settings if necessary, and give it a file name to save to. When Rendering, PiTiVi plays back the project and seems to render the final version in real time.
PiTiVi picks some sane defaults and really only asks the user to choose the file name, which shouldn't be too taxing even for the most inexperienced user. If you want to change the defaults, no problem. PiTiVi offers eight default settings like NTSC at 29.97 FPS, 720p HD, 1080p Full HD, SVGA, XGA, etc. It does pay to check before rendering the first time. PiTiVi defaults to PAL on my system, which might be undesirable if burning to DVD for playback with NTSC equipment in North America.
PiTiVi does have a plugin framework that's meant to facilitate the creation of filters, effects, and transitions, but so far no dice. No plugins are available for PiTiVi yet, at least through the official site or distributed with the packages for PiTiVi for popular distributions.
Overall, PiTiVi is a promising application. It's a decent video editor with no frills, and intuitive to pick up. And in the tests I ran, PiTiVi was rock-solid. This isn't something to be taken for granted. Years ago I spent time editing video with Kino for various projects, and learned to save after nearly every edit or operation.
But without the ability to add transitions, titles, and effects, PiTiVi isn't suitable for much home use beyond very trivial work with home vids—much less professional use.
PiTiVi would almost be a good basic editor if it could capture video off of a camcorder and allow at least a few basic transitions.
The first time Kdenlive is launched, it steps through a dialog that sets the standard project time, shows what modules it uses that are or aren't present on your system (like DVgrab), shows the available codecs, and asks where you'd like to put your project files. It also asks if you want to activate crash recovery, which is never a good sign. Typically, an application that specifically has a crash recovery feature built in (with the possible exception of Vim) means that the developers know and expect that it will crash. Now the question is, how often will the application crash?
The answer? All too often—Kdenlive froze up or crashed a number of times during testing. The crash recovery feature didn't kick in to save the day, either. For example, just using the "split audio" feature caused Kdenlive to freeze completely in one case—but not every time the feature was used. In other instances, adding an effect or performing another operation would cause it to freeze or crash entirely.
The codec support with Kdenlive differs from PiTiVi, because Kdenlive uses FFMpeg instead of Gstreamer. I found fewer limitations in terms of importing materials than with PiTiVi. For instance, the Quicktime files that proved problematic with PiTiVi worked just fine in Kdenlive.
The keyboard controls for Kdenlive provide a bit more fine-grained control, and that's a good thing. The arrow keys step through frame-by-frame, but you can also trigger rewind by hitting J and fast forward with L. That should be familiar to Vim users. Hitting J or L again speeds up the forward/rewind process.
You can also control the tool with the keyboard, and switch between the Select, Razor, and Spacer tools from the keyboard. Kdenlive provides the ability to set guides/markers, and you can navigate those from the keyboard by using Alt+ the right and left arrow keys.
The tools provided for editing clips with Kdenlive are easy to pick up, though actual proficiency might take a little while.
The interface itself is also pretty flexible. The main window has five elements by default: the Project Tree that holds clips and the effects stack, the Project Monitor that displays the video being edited, the effects list to choose your effects from, the undo history display, and the actual timeline display where you edit video.
Most of these elements can be detached and re-arranged or popped out entirely. For users editing video on multiple screens this can be very useful. Pop out the Project Monitor and slide it to its own screen to see maximum detail while fiddling with the tools on the other monitor, or use a secondary monitor to hold the dialogs you use less frequently.
After spending a few days with PiTiVi, Kdenlive was like being a kid in a candy store. I found nearly 30 video effects, and a like number of audio effects that could be used to modify the source video out of the box. Kdenlive also has a feature to download additional filter and rendering add-ons.
Actually using the effects takes a little practice. It's not always immediately obvious how to apply some of the effects and transitions to best effect. It's not too difficult to get a handle on, but it usually takes a little bit of trial and error to get things right the first time.
Some of the effects are a little amateurish, though. For example, depending on how you tweak the options on the "Dust" effect, the result ranges from a few random pixels being added to the video to enormous chunks of "dust" and what seems to be an attempt at hair. But it doesn't produce a convincing "dust" effect to the video clip.
The Undo History feature in Kdenlive is particularly useful. It actually shows each step in an editing session in order, so you can step through your edits and even revert to the state of the project at each stage in its production. Simply choose one of the previous states of the project, click on it in the Undo History, and start again from there. There's no "undo undo," so if you return to a previous point in the history, changes past that are lost.
Though it's not technically video editing, one feature that many users will appreciate in Kdenlive is the ability to extract a frame from video and save it as a still image. This can also be very useful if you're creating titles and transitions.
Once the project is complete and it's time to render to final output, Kdenlive offers a dizzying array of options. Unfortunately, they come with little guidance.
The format options are fairly straightforward, you can choose from HDV, Raw DV, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, H.264, Flash, Theora, etc. What's confusing is the right-hand side of the dialog, which offers a range of options like "Flash 200k," "Flash 200k 2 pass," through "Flash 12000k 2 pass." That might be meaningful to users well-versed in video production, but it's going to be gibberish to many users.
One thing that doesn't make sense is that Kdenlive has a "Project Settings" dialog that's actually pretty usable, but it doesn't seem to use those settings by default when you render a project.
A few attempts to render projects resulted in "Rendering Crashed" errors, which didn't provide any guidance as to the problem. Was it because Kdenlive couldn't convert from the source materials to the selected format? Was it because the project was too large, or some other reason? It'd be useful to know what caused the error, but Kdenlive only told me that the rendering had crashed.
Assuming the stars align and there are no problems with rendering, Kdenlive shows a progress dialog of the rendering job while you wait. If waiting isn't your style, you can generate a script to render the job in the background or to be run later.
One thing that is nice with Kdenlive is the DVD wizard. You can take one or more MPEG files, create a menu, and output an ISO to be burned to DVD.
For die-hard Linux users, Kdenlive is probably the best option available right now for producing video. But if you compare Kdenlive to video editing tools on other platforms—rather than the competition on Linux—it doesn't fare so well. Tools like iMovie are almost as flexible as Kdenlive, and much easier to use. Tools like Final Cut Pro have more features and are going to be far more suitable for professional users, especially if you factor in the stability issues.
But Kdenlive is almost there. It has the raw features that many users need, and it's fairly usable. It's certainly flexible in terms of formats it can consume and render final output for.
PiViTi and Kdenlive show promise, but neither application is fully "there" just yet. PiTiVi is stable and intuitive, but lacks features. Kdenlive is very feature-rich, but needs to be stabilized just a bit; and some work could be done to make it more user-friendly. My first recommendation for doing video editing on Linux is definitely Kdenlive at this stage, though. It may not be as capable as a tool like, say, Final Cut Pro, but it does have most if not all of what many users need from a video editing application.
Progress is being made, but some work is needed to take these applications the "last mile" to be entirely suitable for mainstream use.
Source By : http://arstechnica.com
While Linux still lacks a direct competitor to tools like Apple's iMovie or Final Cut Pro, the current crop of video editing tools are much more capable and easy to use. Two tools in particular stand out: PiTiVi and Kdenlive. Both suites are under active development and look promising. In this article, we'll take a look at what both of these tools can and can't do.
What a video editor needs
You should be able to count on a base set of features from any video editor that's worth its salt. At a bare minimum, any video editor should be able to import a wide range of formats, edit video and audio in a non-linear fashion, provide transitions and titling, allow multiple sources for video and audio, and be intuitive enough that it doesn't require a week's worth of training to become productive.
Ideally, an application would go a bit farther than that and also provide effects to adjust color balance, enhance the image, or just improve the raw video.
PiTiVi
PiTiVi is Gtk-based and uses the Gstreamer Multimedia Framework. The goal for PiTiVi is to be intuitive for newcomers and suitable for professionals. Intuitive it is, but suitable for professionals? Not just yet.The latest version of PiTiVi is 0.13.3. As the version number suggests, it's early on in development and not quite fully baked. The version number reflects features implemented, however, and not stability. In my time working with PiTiVi, it was stable and I did not encounter any serious bugs.
Import works fairly well with PiTiVi, though some formats may be problematic depending on which Gstreamer plugins you're using. For instance, I grabbed RiP: A Remix Manifesto in Ogg Theora and in Apple Quicktime format (H.264). PiTiVi happily imported both formats, but only recognized the video channel when importing from Quicktime. This also was the case when importing movies from an iPhone. Importing some of my Ogg tracks from Magnatune for audio worked just fine.
After doing a bit of detective work (which is to say actually reading through the manual) I found this was due to its use of the Fluendo Gstreamer codecs. Apparently, the Fluendo Gstreamer plugins work well for playback, but not editing. If you're using the "ugly" Gstreamer plugins instead, MP3 import seems to work just fine, but still no luck with Quicktime.
PiTiVi Project Settings
Right now, PiTiVi only supports importing from files—it doesn't support importing video from a camcorder over Firewire (IEEE 1394) connection. This is rather unfortunate, as many users are going to expect and want to work with a comprehensive application to import and edit video. If you're using a flip cam that generates a usable file format, it's not a problem, but if you have a camcorder, it's a bit of a headache. Support for this is planned for future releases, but isn't yet in stable versions of PiViTi.
One small thing PiTiVi does that is particularly useful when adding clips to a project—it shows the video and audio channels separately by default, and allows you to edit them separately.
Editing and rendering with PiTiVi
All of my tests of PiTiVi and Kdenlive were run on a system with dual Xeon 3.2GHz CPUs, 8GB of RAM, with an Nvidia Quadro FX 1400. While not a top-of-the-line system, it's beefy enough that it should be able to handle video editing and rendering without any grief.PiTiVi's performance gave me no complaints. The user interface is snappy at all times, and was never laggy or left me twiddling my thumbs while waiting for file imports or when moving around fairly large pieces of video and audio.
Working with source materials is straightforward. Just drag the video and/or audio clips into the bottom timeline. You can drag clips around to arrange them in any order you like.
The toolbar at the bottom of the PiTiVi interface allows you to cut clips, merge or link two or more clips, and group clips together (such as audio and video clips). It shouldn't take more than five to ten minutes to get the hang of PiTiVi's editing capabilities, especially since the feature set is so limited.
Most of PiTiVi's operations can be performed from the keyboard. For instance, the arrow keys allow you to step through frames one at a time, which makes it much easier to find exactly the right frame. The space bar starts playback, Ctrl-R calls the "Razor" tool to make a cut—though it seems you must use the mouse to actually perform the cut.
At the moment, PiTiVi lacks markers—the ability to set any markers throughout the project. Markers can be useful in providing visual cues when working on a project for key points in video clips that you might want to use while editing. Again, the documents indicate this is a planned feature, but it was not implemented in the stable release.
Basically, PiTiVi is missing the ability to do anything other than re-arrange source materials. There's no way to do even a simple wipe or overlay to transition between scenes in a project. Captioning the video or providing titles isn't possible within PiTiVi either. This means that PiTiVi is unsuitable for any sort of professional work, and probably isn't full-featured enough for many amateur video editors either.
It is possible to import static graphics into PiTiVi, such as PNGs. This can be used to provide credits and some very rudimentary wipes for projects, but isn't a real substitute for the actual features.
Rendering the final output with PiTiVi is straightforward. Once editing is finished, just click the "Render Project" button, tweak the settings if necessary, and give it a file name to save to. When Rendering, PiTiVi plays back the project and seems to render the final version in real time.
PiTiVi picks some sane defaults and really only asks the user to choose the file name, which shouldn't be too taxing even for the most inexperienced user. If you want to change the defaults, no problem. PiTiVi offers eight default settings like NTSC at 29.97 FPS, 720p HD, 1080p Full HD, SVGA, XGA, etc. It does pay to check before rendering the first time. PiTiVi defaults to PAL on my system, which might be undesirable if burning to DVD for playback with NTSC equipment in North America.
Final ruling on PiTiVi
Unfortunately, with the current release, PiTiVi lacks too many features to satisfy any but the most basic use cases. It's possible to edit video and render projects for distribution—but it doesn't provide any effects, transitions, or the ability to create titles or captions. Even simple things, like rotating a frame or anything more than basic management of audio levels, aren't possible right now.PiTiVi does have a plugin framework that's meant to facilitate the creation of filters, effects, and transitions, but so far no dice. No plugins are available for PiTiVi yet, at least through the official site or distributed with the packages for PiTiVi for popular distributions.
Overall, PiTiVi is a promising application. It's a decent video editor with no frills, and intuitive to pick up. And in the tests I ran, PiTiVi was rock-solid. This isn't something to be taken for granted. Years ago I spent time editing video with Kino for various projects, and learned to save after nearly every edit or operation.
But without the ability to add transitions, titles, and effects, PiTiVi isn't suitable for much home use beyond very trivial work with home vids—much less professional use.
PiTiVi would almost be a good basic editor if it could capture video off of a camcorder and allow at least a few basic transitions.
Exploring Kdenlive
Where PiTiVi is intuitive but a bit light on features, Kdenlive is very full-featured but somewhat counter-intuitive at times. Kdenlive also suffers a bit in the stability department, and the application crashed a few times while I was testing it.The first time Kdenlive is launched, it steps through a dialog that sets the standard project time, shows what modules it uses that are or aren't present on your system (like DVgrab), shows the available codecs, and asks where you'd like to put your project files. It also asks if you want to activate crash recovery, which is never a good sign. Typically, an application that specifically has a crash recovery feature built in (with the possible exception of Vim) means that the developers know and expect that it will crash. Now the question is, how often will the application crash?
The answer? All too often—Kdenlive froze up or crashed a number of times during testing. The crash recovery feature didn't kick in to save the day, either. For example, just using the "split audio" feature caused Kdenlive to freeze completely in one case—but not every time the feature was used. In other instances, adding an effect or performing another operation would cause it to freeze or crash entirely.
Editing with Kdenlive
Kdenlive offers a few more choices for acquiring video than PiTiVi. If you have a camcorder with a firewire connection, you can bring in video that way. It also works with clips off your hard drive, static images, and audio files, and it's even possible to record your desktop session if you happen to have recordMyDesktop installed.The codec support with Kdenlive differs from PiTiVi, because Kdenlive uses FFMpeg instead of Gstreamer. I found fewer limitations in terms of importing materials than with PiTiVi. For instance, the Quicktime files that proved problematic with PiTiVi worked just fine in Kdenlive.
The keyboard controls for Kdenlive provide a bit more fine-grained control, and that's a good thing. The arrow keys step through frame-by-frame, but you can also trigger rewind by hitting J and fast forward with L. That should be familiar to Vim users. Hitting J or L again speeds up the forward/rewind process.
You can also control the tool with the keyboard, and switch between the Select, Razor, and Spacer tools from the keyboard. Kdenlive provides the ability to set guides/markers, and you can navigate those from the keyboard by using Alt+ the right and left arrow keys.
The tools provided for editing clips with Kdenlive are easy to pick up, though actual proficiency might take a little while.
The interface itself is also pretty flexible. The main window has five elements by default: the Project Tree that holds clips and the effects stack, the Project Monitor that displays the video being edited, the effects list to choose your effects from, the undo history display, and the actual timeline display where you edit video.
Kdenlive Effects Stack
Everything and the kitchen sink
Undo History Dialog
Actually using the effects takes a little practice. It's not always immediately obvious how to apply some of the effects and transitions to best effect. It's not too difficult to get a handle on, but it usually takes a little bit of trial and error to get things right the first time.
Some of the effects are a little amateurish, though. For example, depending on how you tweak the options on the "Dust" effect, the result ranges from a few random pixels being added to the video to enormous chunks of "dust" and what seems to be an attempt at hair. But it doesn't produce a convincing "dust" effect to the video clip.
The Undo History feature in Kdenlive is particularly useful. It actually shows each step in an editing session in order, so you can step through your edits and even revert to the state of the project at each stage in its production. Simply choose one of the previous states of the project, click on it in the Undo History, and start again from there. There's no "undo undo," so if you return to a previous point in the history, changes past that are lost.
Though it's not technically video editing, one feature that many users will appreciate in Kdenlive is the ability to extract a frame from video and save it as a still image. This can also be very useful if you're creating titles and transitions.
Rendering and finalizing projects with Kdenlive
Kdenlive Rendering
The format options are fairly straightforward, you can choose from HDV, Raw DV, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, H.264, Flash, Theora, etc. What's confusing is the right-hand side of the dialog, which offers a range of options like "Flash 200k," "Flash 200k 2 pass," through "Flash 12000k 2 pass." That might be meaningful to users well-versed in video production, but it's going to be gibberish to many users.
One thing that doesn't make sense is that Kdenlive has a "Project Settings" dialog that's actually pretty usable, but it doesn't seem to use those settings by default when you render a project.
A few attempts to render projects resulted in "Rendering Crashed" errors, which didn't provide any guidance as to the problem. Was it because Kdenlive couldn't convert from the source materials to the selected format? Was it because the project was too large, or some other reason? It'd be useful to know what caused the error, but Kdenlive only told me that the rendering had crashed.
Assuming the stars align and there are no problems with rendering, Kdenlive shows a progress dialog of the rendering job while you wait. If waiting isn't your style, you can generate a script to render the job in the background or to be run later.
One thing that is nice with Kdenlive is the DVD wizard. You can take one or more MPEG files, create a menu, and output an ISO to be burned to DVD.
Kdenlive verdict
Getting up to speed with Kdenlive can take a while, but it's worth the time investment. It's an impressive suite and has a lot of potential. Kdenlive has a few rough edges that need to be smoothed out, and, more importantly, the stability problems need to be taken care of before it's ready for mainstream users.For die-hard Linux users, Kdenlive is probably the best option available right now for producing video. But if you compare Kdenlive to video editing tools on other platforms—rather than the competition on Linux—it doesn't fare so well. Tools like iMovie are almost as flexible as Kdenlive, and much easier to use. Tools like Final Cut Pro have more features and are going to be far more suitable for professional users, especially if you factor in the stability issues.
But Kdenlive is almost there. It has the raw features that many users need, and it's fairly usable. It's certainly flexible in terms of formats it can consume and render final output for.
Conclusion
Demand for video editing tools is only going to increase. This is an area where Linux desperately needs to be competitive if there's hope for the Linux desktop going mainstream anytime soon.PiViTi and Kdenlive show promise, but neither application is fully "there" just yet. PiTiVi is stable and intuitive, but lacks features. Kdenlive is very feature-rich, but needs to be stabilized just a bit; and some work could be done to make it more user-friendly. My first recommendation for doing video editing on Linux is definitely Kdenlive at this stage, though. It may not be as capable as a tool like, say, Final Cut Pro, but it does have most if not all of what many users need from a video editing application.
Progress is being made, but some work is needed to take these applications the "last mile" to be entirely suitable for mainstream use.
Source By : http://arstechnica.com
Next Hotot: The hottest new Twitter app for Linux
Despite the existence of seemingly thousands of native Linux Twitter clients knocking around more spring up each and every day.
Well maybe not every day, but you get the gist. Adage tells us that ‘You can never have too much of a good thing’ but is new kid on the block ‘Hotot’ yet another derivative Twitter application or does it offer up something fresh for Linux users?

iApp feel
I’m going to break down right to it: Hotot looks, feels and handles like nothing else on the Linux desktop. In many ways it is born more in the mould of an iPhone or Android application than that for use on a desktop – despite being designed specifically for the Linux desktop.
It has slick transitory animations, does things I’ve yet to see other twitter clients do and feels very responsive - likely due to its python-base affording it a nimbleness other applications would kill for.
Whilst all of this results in a great looking app it does mean Hotot feels disjointed from the rest of the desktop. This is no biggy if you’re an avid Air-based app user but might be a killer if you’re used to the nuances native-looking integration provides.
Tweet Views
My favourite feature in Hotot is that of the ‘Retweets and retweeted’ pane which allows you to see all retweets in their own stream, your own retweets in a stream and even your own tweets, retweeted!
Extensions
Notably Hotot has an extension framework to allow extra tools/services to be added. Example extensions that ship with it include Image uploading & Geo-location. It will be interesting to see what kind of third-party extensions appear – and when.
Indicator Applet
Whilst the application uses an Indicator Applet it is largely redundant, containing a meagre selection of entries with only two being of much use ‘Show’ and ‘Exit’.

‘Preferences’ does open ‘Preferences’ but since that it displayed in app (which has a prominent Preferences button anyway) this seem futile.
Standard features
As with every twitter client worth its salt Hotot comes with standard features such as: -
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:hotot-team
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install hotot
Source By : http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk
Well maybe not every day, but you get the gist. Adage tells us that ‘You can never have too much of a good thing’ but is new kid on the block ‘Hotot’ yet another derivative Twitter application or does it offer up something fresh for Linux users?
iApp feel
I’m going to break down right to it: Hotot looks, feels and handles like nothing else on the Linux desktop. In many ways it is born more in the mould of an iPhone or Android application than that for use on a desktop – despite being designed specifically for the Linux desktop.
It has slick transitory animations, does things I’ve yet to see other twitter clients do and feels very responsive - likely due to its python-base affording it a nimbleness other applications would kill for.
Whilst all of this results in a great looking app it does mean Hotot feels disjointed from the rest of the desktop. This is no biggy if you’re an avid Air-based app user but might be a killer if you’re used to the nuances native-looking integration provides.
Tweet Views
My favourite feature in Hotot is that of the ‘Retweets and retweeted’ pane which allows you to see all retweets in their own stream, your own retweets in a stream and even your own tweets, retweeted!
Extensions
Notably Hotot has an extension framework to allow extra tools/services to be added. Example extensions that ship with it include Image uploading & Geo-location. It will be interesting to see what kind of third-party extensions appear – and when.
Indicator Applet
Whilst the application uses an Indicator Applet it is largely redundant, containing a meagre selection of entries with only two being of much use ‘Show’ and ‘Exit’.
‘Preferences’ does open ‘Preferences’ but since that it displayed in app (which has a prominent Preferences button anyway) this seem futile.
Standard features
As with every twitter client worth its salt Hotot comes with standard features such as: -
- Mentions
- Inbox/outbox
- Favourite/viewing favourites
- Editing profile
- Search
- Retweet functions
- Ability to follow, unfollow and block users
Download Hotot Alpha
As Hotot is still in Alpha there is no “stable” release yet available. In the mean time you can use the Hotot Daily Build PPA to find out what the fuss is about – but be aware this will be buggy.sudo add-apt-repository ppa:hotot-team
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install hotot
Source By : http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk
10 things to do after installing Ubuntu 10.04 Lucid Lynx
If you’re going to be installing a freshly minted copy of Ubuntu 10.04 LTS later today or this weekend then the following list of 10 reader submitted post-install must-do’s will help ensure that you’re off to a flying start with your new OS.
1. Run Update Manager
Just because you’ve installed the latest version of Ubuntu doesn’t mean that there won’t be some updates and patches waiting for you. Make sure you run the update manager (if it doesn’t update you first) so that you’re benefitting from the latest fixes and features.2. Enable graphics card drivers for 3D fun
If you want to use advanced desktop effects such as Compiz (3d Cube, wobbly windows) then you will need to enable the “official” drivers for your graphics card.Ubuntu should automatically detect and alert you that 3D drivers are available. If so, you will see a ‘circuit board’ icon appear on the top panel. Click this and follow the prompts.
If Ubuntu fails to detect any hardware (do be patient as this isn’t always instant) then you can manually run the hardware configuration tool yourself from the System > Preferences menu.
3. Enable playback of MP3’s, MP4’s & more
It’s a shame this step has to be included at all but sadly Ubuntu aren’t allowed by law to ship certain multimedia codec’s out of the box. Installing them yourself, thankfully, is a breeze – just click the button below!4. Install more themes
Want a bigger selection of themes to choose between? You’ll find many beautiful and stylish ones in the Community Themes package.5. Change font and/or font size
I know what you’re thinking: those fonts look huge, huh? Set them to a smaller size via the Appearance menu (Shortcut: Right click on Desktop > Change Background > Fonts).If the default font isn’t to your taste a lot of readers suggested installing DroidSans.
Many users also recommend you install the Microsoft Core fonts package for better web browsing:
6. Set up UbuntuOne file sync
If you don’t already use UbuntuOne now is the perfect time to do so. You’ll get 2 GB of free storage, you are able to sync your Firefox bookmarks, Tomboy notes and Evolution contacts between computers – as well as any file or folder you wish.Head to Applications > Internet > UbuntuOne to get started.
7. Install Ubuntu Tweak and make your life easier
Ubuntu Tweak is a one-stop shop for managing and installing extra applications, tweaking your desktop (such as putting the window controls back on the right and choosing which icons show on the desktop) and allowing you to keep your system in tip-top shape with the built in system cleaning options. (Ubuntu tweak recently won our ‘Best System Cleaners’ poll by a landslide – and for good reason!)8. Visit the Software Centre to find great apps
One size certainly does not fit all so if you’re wanting to add VLC, install Photoshop rival The GIMP or play some awesome games then look no further than the Ubuntu Software Centre which can be launched from the Applications menu.
Everything is one-click install so browse around – make sure you check out the featured applications section, too!
9. Download the Ubuntu Manual
The “Ubuntu Manual” (which is actually called ‘Getting Started with Ubuntu 10.04’ but Manual sounds cooler) is a fantastic source of information for both newcomers and those who consider themselves apt with Ubuntu.It has a straight-forward and easily accessible style, lots of screenshots and step-by-step instructions how how to get the best out of Ubuntu 10.04 LTS.
10. Enjoy using it!
Forget about finding new apps or tweaking some part of Lucid for an hour or so and just use Ubuntu like anyone else would: Browse the net, chat on Empathy, type up that letter in Open Office and listen to something awesome in Rhythmbox.Enjoy the awesomeness of Ubuntu 10.04 LTS as your survey your desktop like you are a king surveying your estate. Look at the woodland, the peacocks on the lawn. Be the king of your own calm kingdom.
Source By : http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk
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