Just like elsewhere, there are two ways to remove: lift and ripple-delete. Well, these trimming keyboard shortcuts are actually like two steps in one: split and remove. Very often, one - based on their technique - splits a clip and then removes one of the new pieces. It might be easier to think of this as a smarter way to split/slice a clip on the timeline, and it affects the clip under the playhead - not the currently selected clip. The new keyboard shortcuts only let you reduce the duration of a clip. The last big new thing is a boost for trimming on the timeline. With this release, thanks to the recent upgrade to FFmpeg 2.7, we extend device and screen capture coverage to all supported operating systems. A year ago, we added A/V device support on Windows. So, now we have it.įor a long while now, we have supported audio and video devices on Linux such as microphones, webcams, and more as well as screen capture. It requires the ability to read pixel data in JavaScript, which has not really worked correctly until the Shotcut upgrade to Qt 5.5. When I discovered it and learned about the WebGL version by Felix Turner a couple of years ago, I thought I ought to be able to make it work with Shotcut’s HTML filtering system (WebVfx). The Rutt-Etra-Izer filter might seem like a strange addition, but there is an interesting backstory to it. Reorganize the Settings menu and added headings.Added video Deinterlace, Interpolation, and Parallel-processing options to Encode panel.Added Save button to text viewer dialogs (logs, XML).Added support for ripple trimming on Timeline.Added keyboard shortcuts for trimming on Timeline: I, Shift+I, O, Shift+O.Added audio/video device and screen capture for OS X.Version 15.11 is now available for download.
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