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6 Essential Open Source Apps for Mac Videographers

Written by Sam Dean - Jun. 12, 2008

If you do any work with video on a Mac, you probably already have some basic software for video editing and production. Out in the open source fields of dreams, though, there are many excellent utilities, adjunct applications, and just plain novelties that any videographer can benefit from using. These include excellent tools for incorporating animation with your videos, encoding video in multiple formats, producing slick storyboards, and more.  Here are six examples.

Simple Theora Encoder installs quickly on Mac OS X 10.4 or higher, and does an outstanding job of converting video among many popular file formats. To use it, you just open a dialog box and click "add" to bring up the Mac's Finder menu. The Encoder can convert multiple files at once from several different formats, including .avi, .mov, and mp4. As Lisa wrote, click Encode, and that's all there is to it.

Limewire is well-known as an extremely fast file sharing application and features a P2P linking scheme called Magnet Links, similar to working with torrent files. This is an excellent tool for sharing video files, and it runs on the Mac, Windows or Linux.

Blender, seen at left, is not only one of the best graphics/animation programs from the open source world, it's one of the best open source applications of any kind. Widely used in the video and animation communities, it's great for 3D modeling, rendering, playback, and creating memorable characters.Long-form animated films have been created entirely in Blender.

Miro is an Internet television and video player and publisher that is available in a Mac version. It lets you access, and organize, free web video channels and play video files. You can use it to access lots of good HD content, and if you publish video on the web, you can get a custom version of Miro that can keep you from having to build your own player, while keeping your player personalized and unique.

In his recent post about Google folks creating useful applications for the Mac, Matt Asay brought Vidnik to my attention. If you like to use an iSight camera to record videos and load them on YouTube, this is the app for you. The application is specifically tuned for sending your video to YouTube for encoding and posting. Very nice.

Celtx is open source media pre-production software that goes way beyond just helping you generate scripts. You can do storyboards, develop characters, and more. I recommend taking the Feature Tour.


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  1. By an anonymous user on Jun. 12, 2008

    Why is Limewire included in this list? Are we talking about Video Editing tools or P2P file-sharing software...

    0 Votes
  2. By samdean on Jun. 12, 2008

    Limewire is a popular way to share video. This post isn't only about editing tools.

    0 Votes
  3. By an anonymous user on Jun. 13, 2008

    Sorry Om & Co but this was one of your lamest posts so far.

    0 Votes
  4. By grant on Jun. 14, 2008

    Yeah. Seriously. Why would I use Limewire instead of Bittorrent? It just doesn't make sense.

    0 Votes
  5. By Tim Breslin on Jun. 16, 2008

    I use Videobox, well - i also *created* Videobox :-) ... the demo is free (www.tastyapps.com) and if you ask nicely i'll hook you up with an free copy ;-)

    0 Votes
  6. By cvb2 on Aug. 16, 2008

    In trying to convert a mp4 (h.264/aac) to ogg (theora/vorbis) I noticed that Simple Theora Encoder seemed to convert the video fine, but there was no audio. There was a comment on Help:Converting Video - Wikimedia Commons (to the effect that there has not been success converting Quicktime files with audio tracks). Are there any workarounds?

    0 Votes
  7. By an anonymous user on Aug. 18, 2008

    In trying to convert a mp4 (h.264/aac) to ogg (theora/vorbis) I noticed that Simple Theora Encoder seemed to convert the video fine, but there was no audio. There was a comment on Help:Converting Video - Wikimedia Commons (to the effect that there has not been success converting Quicktime files with audio tracks). Are there any workarounds?

    0 Votes
  8. By batteryfast on Oct. 06, 2008

    here was a comment on Help:Converting Video - Wikimedia Commons (to the effect that there www.batteryfast.com has not been success converting Quicktime files with audio tracks). Are there any workarounds?

    0 Votes
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