I have been using Pinnacle Studio since version 1.1 in 2001. Went
through version 8,15 and now 22. It was not difficult to learn and has
so many features. Unfortunately, the latest version has many small bugs
and the support was very poor. In these few years there are many free
and affordable software but I still not found a free software which
support NVENC. On my setup with a GTX1060 display card, Pinnacle Studio
22 output H265 1080p video at over 150fps which is great for proof.
The other video editing software I use is TMPGEnc Video Mastering 6, it
is very robust and powerful, with X264 and X265 output. It also supports
NVENC but its timeline mode is not easy to use. AFAIK this is the only
software that support DVB subtitle which I need for converting TV files.
My son recently need to editing some videos, he wanted a freeware to
start with. I tried the VideoPad, it seems okay with him.
I only used the Cyberlink PowerDirector briefly, it was a limited free
version came with my video capture card, it seems a fine software but
not free.
C.H.Ling
On 20/02/03 7:53, Mike Gordon via olympus wrote:
Those brought back recent memories--showed them to Marnie as well as the recent
gallery you posted. She picked out some favorites.
PS does all the basics but there is some fighting. Bringing in stills,
adjusting audio a bit, and transitions are all easy. I learned from C.H. that
Adobe, PS does not support AC3.
So I had some trouble using my Panny movies audio when shot in avchd. Neat
image used to have a video plug-in for PS but now only for the full fledged
video packages, last I looked.
C.H. a couple years back did like Cyberlink Power director.
Video dabbler only, Mike
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