
A wide range of effects and transitions.Ability to add custom effects and transitions.

A built-in title editor and tools to create, move, crop and delete video clips, audio clips, text clips and image clips.Multi-track editing with a timeline and supports an unlimited number of video and audio tracks.As time goes on developers will learn to rely on more and more modern architecture and instructions that simply can't be backported efficiently, if at all, so over time we will see 32 bit projects decay like we have with other architectures that have become obsolete. That said, Debian stable (currently Buster) is the best to go with it bandwidth and os updates is an issue over Sid or arch (which are rolling releases), albeit, versions don't get updated until next release.Īnd finally with all that said, 32bit days are numbered. It's not an official release of arch, but it's there. While I am a big fan of arch, I've got no experience with it with regards to it's 32bit alternative. There's also the arch Linux 32 bit project that may also be of use, if Debian isn't quite your fancy. 20.04 is in the Sid repo, so if your friends needs 32 bit and wants a relatively recent version, I'd suggest that. Luckily projects like Debian continue to support old architectures, including providing 32 builds in their repos of kdenlive. It breaks my heart, but is the way it is :( I too have a friend who is stuck with really old hardware and is so unprivileged he is unable to upgrade. They're not called the universal operating system for nothing. However, there is one project in particular that when it comes to 32bit, if anyone ever will, they will continue to support it as best they can, and that is Debian. Ubuntu (at least has tried and will try again)Įtc have all dropped 32bit or are in the process. Kdenlive certainly isn't the only one in this camp.
