I'm thinking about getting into film and Machinima and bringing my Youtube account back to life.
So what video editing program do you use?
What's your favorite Video editing program?
Last edited by TectonInd on Jul 11th '10, 14:43, edited 1 time in total.
Minotaur.
underworld : simple fun netmaps // prahblum peack : simple rejected netmaps
azure dreams : simple horrible netmaps // v6.0!!!: thomas mann's greatest hits : simple simple netmaps
azure dreams : simple horrible netmaps // v6.0!!!: thomas mann's greatest hits : simple simple netmaps
CAN I GET A LEGIT ANSWERirons wrote:Minotaur.
iMovie
{All of these are for the Windows Platfom}
Well, Premiere Elements 3 was a really good and full-fledged consumer product. But I believe it has trouble with Vista IIRC (probably Windows 7 too). If you can find it, and don't mind slightly older technology, I'd go with that. [Since Premiere Elements version 4 ran poorly for me, and I didn't really like version 7's new interface.]
I'd also recommend CS3 of Premiere if you want a suite of programs, such as After Effects. As for CS4 Premiere, It also seemed to run slower than CS3 Premiere, and its features didn't win me over. CS5 I can't really comment on, since I haven't used it much, though it seems to perform better than CS4, though I still don't really use the new features for it. [Note the hardware used has changed through my experience with these programs, so they are not set on a standard basis of performance]
I've hated all the Ulead products I've used though it has been more than 4 years since I've touched one of their products, so unless it is Oregon Trail #, it is probably completely different than the dodgy interface/constant 10 minute crashes I faced.
Windows Live Movie Maker is good for basic stuff, and Windows Movie Maker that ships with Vista and below is probably better, but still basic. If you don't really care about layering video clips, then those should be fine for everything that you need to do.
My Conclusion: Download a Trial of each program and see which one you like the best. Windows Live Movie Maker is Free, though the rest are pricier. Therefore, don't buy until you see if you like it or not. Don't be caught with a horrible video editor, you will be spending a lot of time with it. (And more time with headaches if you hate it) Remember, it isn't the editing program that defines the video unless there are features that are demanded. Therefore, even the most basic program could be good depending on your needs. (Just don't put the default Blue Background of title slides from Windows Movie Maker on Youtube.....EVER)
Well, Premiere Elements 3 was a really good and full-fledged consumer product. But I believe it has trouble with Vista IIRC (probably Windows 7 too). If you can find it, and don't mind slightly older technology, I'd go with that. [Since Premiere Elements version 4 ran poorly for me, and I didn't really like version 7's new interface.]
I'd also recommend CS3 of Premiere if you want a suite of programs, such as After Effects. As for CS4 Premiere, It also seemed to run slower than CS3 Premiere, and its features didn't win me over. CS5 I can't really comment on, since I haven't used it much, though it seems to perform better than CS4, though I still don't really use the new features for it. [Note the hardware used has changed through my experience with these programs, so they are not set on a standard basis of performance]
I've hated all the Ulead products I've used though it has been more than 4 years since I've touched one of their products, so unless it is Oregon Trail #, it is probably completely different than the dodgy interface/constant 10 minute crashes I faced.
Windows Live Movie Maker is good for basic stuff, and Windows Movie Maker that ships with Vista and below is probably better, but still basic. If you don't really care about layering video clips, then those should be fine for everything that you need to do.
My Conclusion: Download a Trial of each program and see which one you like the best. Windows Live Movie Maker is Free, though the rest are pricier. Therefore, don't buy until you see if you like it or not. Don't be caught with a horrible video editor, you will be spending a lot of time with it. (And more time with headaches if you hate it) Remember, it isn't the editing program that defines the video unless there are features that are demanded. Therefore, even the most basic program could be good depending on your needs. (Just don't put the default Blue Background of title slides from Windows Movie Maker on Youtube.....EVER)
Last edited by Zott on Jul 12th '10, 04:02, edited 1 time in total.
MonkeyJam for stop motion. In the rare occurrence of live video, I use WINDOWS MOVIE MAKER.
Childhood is not a race. It's a journey.
Thanks, I tried premiere, and it's great! I might buy CS3, because it looks like it has some really good apps (FLASHZott wrote:I'd also recommend CS3 of Premiere if you want a suite of programs, such as After Effects. As for CS4 Premiere, It also seemed to run slower than CS3 Premiere, and its features didn't win me over. CS5 I can't really comment on, since I haven't used it much, though it seems to perform better than CS4, though I still don't really use the new features for it. [Note the hardware used has changed through my experience with these programs, so they are not set on a standard basis of performance]


4 GB of RAM is less than $100, why would you consider buying CS3 but not that?TectonInd wrote:Thanks, I tried premiere, and it's great! I might buy CS3, because it looks like it has some really good apps (FLASH), but I'm not sure because of the exorbitant costs. I just wish I could run a better version, but I only have 1 gig of ram and a Celeron processor, so I'm a bit limited
Good point.Treellama wrote:4 GB of RAM is less than $100, why would you consider buying CS3 but not that?
Now I feel stupid