Lossless cut is an amazingly quick and light tool to just cut front and back off videos. It's my goto for any light trimming.
Linux Video Editing
Welcome! This community is focused on sharing video editing tips, tricks, best practices, and software
Some quick rules:
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No trolling/grieving/being a jerk (This is subjective, but we should all be adults here)
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Don't simply state that something is better in one way or another. Back it up, ideally with sources and video
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Don't make a post in an attempt to make a particular program seem superior. Most of the time it's very application specific use case that makes things faster/better
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Upload a text tutorial along with a video explanation if that is possible. Some videos are great, but text can be followed simply.
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Do not attempt to shame someone for using other software (see rule 1)
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Do not bring up how Resolve is better in a lot of aspects. We know that, and understand that. However, in many use cases Resolve simply will not run or compile.
With all of that being said - welcome to the Linux Video Editing community! The goal here is to help each other with tips, tricks, suggestions, and advice.
In my (limited) experience, different software works better for different styles of projects. Here's my personal list of software that I use for various projects which can all be easily installed from most (all?) package managers:
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Kdenlive
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ShotCut
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Olive
Kdenlive is fantastic for quick edits, though it can do a lot more (beyond the quick edits it is clunky imo). ShotCut can do cool things like motion tractking easily. Olive is fantastic for subtitles, but I absolutely would not recommend it for anything with audio.
I haven't heard of this. Is it a CLI or GUI tool? Sounds really useful.
GUI. It may have cli capabilities but never used it that way.
There's a flatpak, but it's a bit outdated at the moment.
also it works extremely fast because it doesnt re-encode. downside is slight imprecision on cutpoints.
Avidemux is a very simple video editor, so thats half your problem.
I'm also still searching for the organisational half.
For simple trimming, it is really hard to beat KDEnlive. Depending on just how many clips you'll need to import and edit, it might be the tool for the whole job.
That is what I'm doing now, but for the current one there are around 300 clips and it takes me forever just to trim them and put them in chronological order. So I was hoping in the age of AI there might be some too which would support me doing that.
I don't know what you intend to eventually do, but just so you know, kdenlive can get really unstable with big projects like that. If your goal is to eventually edit them into one video, do it in chunks and save often.
I haven't used it too much myself, but you can try out digiKam for organzing stuff. It's mostly for images, so I don't know if you can trim videos directly in there.