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Azucena Jewels

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Aug 2, 2024, 8:36:42 PM8/2/24
to mabittkonxi

Solution 2: Press Win+R and type appdata. Go to Local and within it open kdenliverc with an editor. Search for [misc] and delete [misc] and the following entry. Then restart Kdenlive.

If this is not solving the problem: Press Win+R and type appdata. Go to Local and within it rename kdenliverc to kdenliverc.old. Start Kdenlive, close it and then start Kdenlive again.

To fix this you have to kill the running process: press and hold Ctrl+Shift+Esc and expand the task manager by clicking All details. Then find kdenlive.exe and dbus-daemon.exe, and click End task for both of them.

Get all newest Windows updates. Afterwards, update your graphics card driver, your sound card driver and your printer driver.Some crashes could occur of incompatibility of the graphics card and sound card with the newest Windows10 updates (18.09 update).After you have updated the drivers re-start the computer and try again by starting kdenlive.exe.

When you install Kdenlive you should have a shortcut on your Windows desktop. If none was created, open Windows File Explorer and navigate to C:/Program Files/kdenlive/bin, right-click on kdenlive.exe and select Send To > Desktop (create shortcut)

The standalone version is essentially a self-extracting archive. So depending on where you extracted it to (perhaps just in the Downloads folder) go to that folder, navigate to the folder bin and find the kdenlive.exe file.

someone involved with kdenlive would have to chime in but my guess is that the age of the CPU (10yrs old now) may be a factor here and Im not positive if intel has done and QSV updates to haswell in some years on Windows.

I've been using Kdenlive for video editing on Windows 10 for a few weeks. It worked fine until a couple of days ago. Now, whenever I open it the normal UI appears for about a second, to be replaced by an almost blank window.

I don't know if it's relevant but I was using the application on a docked laptop on a 24 inch 1920 x 1200 monitor. I then moved it to another dock with a 27 inch 1920 x 1080 monitor, without shutting it down. I can't remember if I closed Kdenlive down or left it running in the background when I moved to the new dock. It was after a restart, back on the original dock with the 24 inch monitor, that I first noticed this problem. I've tried viewing it on a 1920 x 1080 monitor again but that made no difference.

Press Win + R (Windows key and R key simultaneously) and type appdata.Go to local and within it open kdenliverc with an editor. Search for[misc] and delete [misc] and the following entry. Example:

The kdenliverc file is in the root of AppData\Local\ (don't get distracted by the AppData\Local\kdenlive\ sub-folder). Removing the [misc] section and the line beneath it from the kdenliverc file did the trick.

Since then my headphone jack has been working fine. The problem is that the solution above broke something with my Kdenlive v20.04.01 Snap install. Whenever I boot Kdenlive I now get the following error:

I am using Ubuntu 20.04.1 and had installed Kdenlive via snap. When I tried to open kdenlive via terminal the splash indicated that the problem is with pulseaudio. Somehow, kdenlive snap isn't able to detect pulseaudio.

The problem is "Where the "kdenliverc" file is located on the KDENLIVE installation manual instructs that "Kdenlive's application-wide persistent settings are stored in the following locations, depending on your platform."

Instead, it was on "/home/username/.var/app/org.kde.kdenlive/config/kdenliverc"According to more experienced Linux users is due to the fact that I am using Flaptpack but the most important is the issue was resolved

>
> Looking for a decent video editing software. I used to use cyberlink
> power director in windows and it worked great for me. Any video editing
> software for linux that stands out?
>
>
There is Kino, Kdenlive, Cinelerra, or Open Movie Editor that I can
think of.

With my having tried more than a half-dozen different Linux packages, IMHO kdenlive is more stable than the other Linux apps. And with my having compared notes with my friends who use Mac and Windows video editors, kdenlive has similar behaviour wrt stability.

any and all of these programmes will require the user to work at using them; we were fortunate to buy MainActor, for linux, and it has been very good, and worked very well; sadly, is no longer sold; our version still does well;

so; I suspect those who use one video-editing programme regularly may get good at that programme; I think cinelerra has recently been revamped; and from each programme,check it out too; it was in the past felt to be more capable, but difficult to understand I thought;

for each programme, there is likely to be its own forum; users would be well advised surely to join one of those specialist forums; ask; contribute; we joined kdenlive forum when we had a look at kdenlive;

If any of them crash on you, simply send an email to the packager and ask that they look into it. Include in the email the version number of the rpm that you have installed, and if you know of the dependencies, also list their version numbers as well. As best possible quote the error message you get.

If any of them crash on you, simply send an email to the packager and
ask that they look into it. Include in the email the version number of
the rpm that you have installed, and if you know of the dependencies,
also list their version numbers as well. As best possible quote the
error message you get.

The one I am referring to is found in the settings app for whichever DE/WM you have. It allows you to start up your session with some settings you prefer, like NumLock, opening a set of windows when you log in, among other things.

Do you mean when you try to open a proper file from the instance of the application which opened normally from kdenlive sample, or do you mean when you try to launch it from the terminal using a valid filename?

Try creating a new user on the system, log in as the new user, and see if they are able to use the application normally. If they can, it may be an indication something in your user config or cache is causing the issue.

I use video editing private quite a lot, changed from the better Kdenlive to Pinaccle (Windows) but get tiered of the bad performance of windows pinnacle.
I thried installing kdenlive via software - comes from package hub I thing. Installation work well, but Kdenlive do not start.

Hi Anderas,
thanks for help. When I installed some years ago it worked out of the box.
Ok. It is installed from SUSE Package Hub:
I have installed LADSPA plugins - they come quite automatically if you know they are missing.

Kdenlive is a free and open-source video editing software, available for windows, mac, and Linux. It stands for KDE Non-Linear Video Editor. As the name suggests, it is a non-linear video editing software. A non-linear video is the one that lets you edit clips and videos in any order and does not require you to edit linearly (one clip after another). It is based on the cross-platform framework and KDE frameworks and libraries. In this article, we will see how you can install this video editor in Linux.

Step 3: After the AppImage is downloaded, we need to give it executable permission. Open the terminal, move to the directory where you have downloaded the AppImage, and type the following command.

Edit: in post 5 I discovered Whisper which does this task MUCH better. So don't use vosk. Some of the info till post 5 is still relevant for subtitle editing in Kdenlive in general.

You can type in the subtitle-text manually either in the .subs or .srt files (in a text-editor) or use an video editor for that (recomended for .srt). What is also possible on some advanced editors including the free and open source multiplatform (Windows, Linux and Intel-Mac) Kdenlive editor is to auto generate the subtitle text for you from the audio or video file. You can then export to an .srt file that works directly in tdm. If you want to use the subs files for shorter sentences, you can just copy text from the .srt files.

In Kdenlive you can install speech to text libraries from VOSK. For this to work you have to download and install Python. Info how to do the process of installation and usage can be seen in the following video (6.5 minutes):

Tweeking the subtitles for Requiem took me hours, becouse I wanted them to line up differently. Usually the subtitles are not generated as full senteces. This looks sloppy. If you want to add subtitles quickly without spending much time on it, it can be done this way. If you want to do it right, it still takes a lot of time in my experience.

The subtitle generation doesn't take different voices into account. So often different voices end up in the same subtitle line (so you have to devide them by editting). Can for example be seen in fm Hair in the Snare where the mission intro has 2 voices.

I just found that if you save in kdenlive as a kdenlive project, the subtitle srt track is automatically exported as well and every time you save in kdenlive again the srt file is updated. So manual exporting isn't actually needed. The srt is saved in format filename.kdenlive.srt .

After a very short time (could be due to it using nvidia cuda, not sure) it creates a bunch of export files, including an srt file with contents: (be warned that you will read the contents of an audio file of a mission, potentially spoiling something)

This is almost exactly how it is supposed to be. Not only does it pick up the language all perfect, it also creates full sentences with punctuation. This is far better than the VOSK method in Kdenlive, which I had to edit afterwards.

After that I load it in Kdenlive together with the sound file and make a couple of easy corrections to the flow. Basically you have to make sure that in the gaps in the audio file the subtitle sentences also stop. See example below:

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