 Just use Cadenlev or is it KDE in live or Cayden live? I don't really know. All I know is that it's science for the KDE or KDestive Environment non-linear video editor. And yes, I know I made that video about DaVinci Resolve and I still consider it a great video editor. In fact, this video you're watching right now is being edited in Resolve. But the thing is, is that something like Cayden live is great for aspiring video editors. Apart from the fact that it runs pretty well on low-end hardware, something that I can't say for Resolve, it also offers a plethora of features, some things that even Resolve doesn't have, at least in the non-studio version. Like the amount of effects packed into Cayden live is genuinely highly impressive. Like Creta, it was developed by KDE and it shows. It's incredibly highly polished and works really, really well. However, there are a couple of caveats and problems with it. Like for example, hardware accelerated previews is not really a thing. Like yes, you can use the Movit or Move-It libraries to get some form of hardware accelerated previews, but they've never really worked for me at all. However, hardware accelerated rendering is definitely possible thanks to FMPAG resets. So for example, with this little code over here, I can render all my videos in NVank using my Nvidia GPU and generating not only smaller files, but rendering generally faster. In terms of performance when doing things like scrubbing the timeline and such, it's not excellent. But the thing is, if all you have to do is crop and cut and learn the basics of video editing and photography, then Cayden Live is more than what you're gonna need. And heck, I use it for many of my videos, like my tutorials and script videos. All of those are edited in Cayden Live. Well, actually that's not true. Sometimes I edit them in Olive, but Olive is quite unstable, so I've decided to go full-time with Cayden Live when it comes to videos that I'm able to edit in it. Don't get me wrong, I still use Resolve as my primary video editor, but Cayden Live has incredible potential. All it really needs is some really good hardware accelerated previews and such. You can always get around it by using proxy clips though, which is a great solution. However, that's just avoiding the problem. This is especially apparent when doing things like keyframing, which is key, no pun intended, to my YouTube channel. Things like a shot of the Cayden Live logo zooming in would be really hard to nail very well in Cayden Live itself. Also, while it may have many effects for video, it is lacking in some of the graphics effects that I like, like for example, a drop shadow for an image with an alpha channel. And while this is easily fixable by just opening up the image in Gimp and making a drop shadow on it, you don't have to do this in other video editors, so that's a point off for Cayden Live. But despite all these shortcomings, it's still an excellent piece of Libre software. And if you want to get into video editing and edit your first video and do all that stuff then, Cayden Live is a great entry point, especially if you have less powerful hardware. So yeah, Cayden Live is a great and highly functional Libre video editor. Just use Cayden Live. This video was surprisingly not brought to you by OpenShot. It has many effects like Cayden Live, but it's sort of lacking in terms of the interface. It looks very antiquated. It has Blender integration, so that's sort of cool if you use Blender or you could use the video editor in Blender, so I don't really get it, but okay.