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K den live
K den live







k den live
  1. #K DEN LIVE INSTALL#
  2. #K DEN LIVE SOFTWARE#
  3. #K DEN LIVE PROFESSIONAL#
  4. #K DEN LIVE FREE#
  5. #K DEN LIVE MAC#

If you use a professional stack-my video stack is SDI-based-this is completely inadequate. For HDMI captures, you might have an audio takeoff or you might use an HDMI extractor, which is.fine, such as it is, but suboptimal. It becomes concretely painful when you have video inputs that also have sound attached. #1: that USB mixer acts as a mixer only for inputs that you can plug into that mixer. (There is one moderately better one I will cover. Which is to say that along the way I've done each of the options you outline. It's about getting controllable audio that scales when you're running a nontrivial live video show my yearly charity event is 24 hours long and typically runs 5 cameras, and between 6 and 12 audio feeds, not all of which are coming in over XLR). So it's not about getting "fantastic sounding audio". To be clear: I am a semi-professional A/V engineer, it's not my day job but I produce pretty large shows.

k den live

In the end, you can get fantastic sounding audio with any of the above approaches and with #1 and #3 you can do it with any application where as with #2 you're limited to OBS only (which isn't a bad thing if you spend your time streaming and primarily recording with it anyways). This takes a bit of initial set up but technically would work with any app, not just OBS and this is what I used to do before going with #1 because I didn't want to run all of these apps every time I wanted to start recording. From here you can use various VSTs and then use Jack (or comparable software) to redirect REAPER's output as input to another app (such as OBS). You can use REAPER (free but you should register it, sort of like Sublime Text) which is a DAW. No hardware needed except for your mic.ģ.

#K DEN LIVE FREE#

OBS has VST plugin support, so you can directly use hundreds of free VSTs to do various effects in real time without needing to mess around with audio redirection. It's just a mic from your computer's point of view.Ģ. and now that becomes your final source of audio so you don't need to process it with software.

k den live

You can buy a hardware USB audio interface + mixer for ~$200-400ish total which can do compression, basic EQs, noise gate, has multiple inputs, etc. vMix literally got $700 out of me because it integrated a good, ASIO-capable mixer into it.įair enough but audio is a completely different animal that can be tamed in a number of ways:ġ.

#K DEN LIVE SOFTWARE#

> But I switched to vMix as my primary video mixing software and won't look back until OBS has significantly better audio management. I wish I could throw money at the kdenlive devs and wake up tomorrow with a video editor that was as good as Camtasia. Enough to where you'll probably abort the idea of using Linux even if you're primarily a developer. I don't want to tear it down too much because it's one of the better screencast video editing tools on Linux but if your profession involves creating screencast videos, you're going to be majorly disappointed compared to Camtasia (or Screenflow). I'm coming at this from the POV of creating 400 videos and have spent over 1,000 hours hardcore editing these videos. I think a lot of people who say kdenlive is good haven't tried Camtasia, or have created enough videos to really figure out kdenlive's shortcomings. Kdenlive feels like it's 10 years behind Camtasia in terms of UI polish and being able to accomplish simple tasks like put a little tooltip overlay on the screen and make it look reasonable. It's one of the reasons why I continue to stick with Windows.

#K DEN LIVE MAC#

Unfortunately for screencast videos where you record your desktop and maybe overlay a webcam kdenlive is really really bad compared to alternatives available on Windows and Mac such as Camtasia / Screenflow. Lightworks has worked well, but Resolve looks like a space age rocket ship. Since I'm basically going to be using the machine for just editing when I'm editing, I may just set it up with Windows and call it done.įrom some of the introductions I've watched, it looks like Resolve is the software I want.

#K DEN LIVE INSTALL#

I tried Resolve on my wife's Win10 laptop with Intel GPU, and it seemed to install and work no problem. I brought home a card from work to try, just to see if it would make a difference, but someone put a AMD card into the box of a nVidia card. It couldn't find a GPU though ("clinfo" showed one), I'm guessing that it really,truly does need an nVidia card. Once I got opencl installed and rebooted the machine, I was able to start Resolve and get into the main interface. I grabbed the AMD "pro" Linux drivers, installed them (which was tricky, their provided scripts bombed out so I manually had to resolve a bunch of dependencies). That mostly seemed to be my problem, the 18.04 OpenCL causes Resolve to segfault.









K den live