
Usually the delay was only on first accessing the keyframe, but when many clips are involved, it would sometimes slow down a bunch as a user would jump around the timeline. Often on projects which contain long clips or many clips, the performance of our keyframe system would slow down. Keyframe performance improvements (magnitudes faster) A huge thanks to Peter M for his dedication and help with this one! This can increase performance by up to 30-40%, just depending on all the various factors. For example, if you are using only MP4/H.264 input files, and your graphics card is supported, it can help OpenShot decode the pixel data from the video, and on the flip side, encode the pixel data back into a video. This can result in a huge performance improvement on some systems, but also depends on the input and output formats, and many other factors. Many graphics cards come with the ability to encode and decode video data without using the CPU. You will see some new options available if you have a supported encoder/decoder. Perhaps one of the most exciting changes in OpenShot 2.5.0 is our experimental support for hardware acceleration.

Solid color clips (including alpha compositing).SVG friendly, to create and include vector titles and credits.Title templates, title creation, sub-titles.Compositing, image overlays, watermarks.Video transitions with real-time previews.Clip resizing, scaling, trimming, snapping, and cutting.


Gnome integration (drag and drop support).Support for many video, audio, and image formats (based on FFmpeg).Easily add sub-titles, transitions, and effects, and then export your film to DVD, YouTube, Vimeo, Xbox 360, and many other common formats. OpenShot can take your videos, photos, and music files and help you create the film you have always dreamed of. OpenShot Video Editor is a free, open-source video editor. Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10
