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GNEVE - GNU Emacs Video Editor mode demo

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Uploaded by on Oct 18, 2007

GNEVE - GNU Emacs Video Editor mode demo

Demonstration video on GNEVE in action.

GNEVE Homepage: http://1010.co.uk/gneve.html

GNEVE is an extension for GNU Emacs to provide flexible EDL (Edit Decision List) video editing facilities as part of a free, multimedia production toolchain. GNEVE is under active development, currently with three developers working towards a first beta release. GNEVE depends on the freely available MPlayer software for previewing, and the latest, free MLT framework/video editor for EDL processing. The software is keystroke driven, with flexible preview and render functionalities. GNEVE is written in Emacs Lisp, and runs on GNU/Linux.
Developers: Martin Howse, Arnold Mátyási, Gábor Török

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Howto & Style

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Uploader Comments (arnmatyasi)

  • Emacs is so cool! But will it also do text editing?

  • Emacs has support for many languages and their scripts, including all the European "Latin" scripts, Russian, Greek, Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Thai, Vietnamese, Lao, Ethiopian, and some Indian scripts. (Sorry, Mayan hieroglyphs are not supported.)

  • Naww man, it's a pretty good OS but the text editor sucks.

    Now if you could use vim in emacs....

  • You should update your Emacs.

    Anyway for some years now (from the end of 80s), there are some nice vi modes that enables using vi(m) inside emacs.

    M-x vi-mode

    M-x vip-mode

    M-x viper-mode

Top Comments

  • It does have a mayan calendar however.

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All Comments (12)

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  • I didn't think this could really be useful but I have to give this a shot next time I need to edit video, I still haven't found a video editor I like :)

    Oh, the music is beautiful too.

  • I used to use vim for around two years and switched to emacs. Yes, vim is good, in some cases text twiddling is faster than in emacs. However, once you start to adapt the editor to the way you like to work (or I like to work), write extensive customizations, add plugins etc. Vim starts to get in the way and feel like it's cobbled together, whereas emacs stays coherent. I think it's because emacs is turtles all the way down.

  • @pughparkour

    Try either M-x viper-mode or M-x ansi-term and launch vim from there.

    You have Vim in emacs.

    So the joke is really "Vim is shit", which I kinda agree with, but still.

  • No thanks, emacs/GNEVE seems cool but I don't like editing my files with an operating system.

  • Haha oddly enough, before reading things, I was playing around with running a bash term in emacs, and running vim within emacs within emacs. Didn't like C-x o though.

  • Cool. Emacs forever!

  • Finally! A video editor using emacs. Life has never been this comfortable !

  • GNEVE is an Emacs user friendly keyboard driven video editor free software with MLT framework.

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