HACKER Q&A
📣 samspenc

Simple video editor for instructional videos


Sorry if this has been discussed before, but what does the HN community use as a simple and barebones but functional video editor for producing instructional videos. Free / open-source is preferable but I'm OK with a paid solution.

I don't need, for example, color correction or motion tracking, but need to be able to cut / splice video clips, replace and add audio, and add some simple text (with font control) and transitions. And hopefully not tax my CPU (and practically non-existent GPU) too much while working on it.

I've used DaVinci Resolve for personal projects and it's amazingly fully featured, but too much for a simple instructional video, but it really taxes my laptop CPU (and I don't want to get a gaming machine to run DaVinci more efficiently.)

On the other hand we have Windows' built-in video editor which is basically too simple to do anything productive in.


  👤 benbristow Accepted Answer ✓
If you're okay with a paid solution Camtasia is probably the gold standard for tutorial/instructional videos, especially screencasts.

https://www.techsmith.com/video-editor.html

For something free, I've had success with OpenShot and used it for show & tells at work on a work machine that I didn't have a licence to use anything more 'professional' with but be prepared to finnick about with it, but for your simple use case it should do the trick. You can use OBS (https://obsproject.com/) or ShareX (https://getsharex.com/) as free tools to capture the screen and/or your webcam.

https://www.openshot.org/


👤 aosaigh
If you’re making screenshare style instructional videos, Camtasia and Screenflow are the two that come to mind. Camtasia is probably the more polished of the two. Make sure you get a good mic if you are recording yourself (Blue Yeti is a well known low/mid tier, Shure MV7 is a good high tier)

👤 aristofun
Camtasia is full of sh… bugs and stupid ui decisions, once you really start heavily using it.

Screenflow these days look like the only simple and robust editor with all crucial screencasts features.

(Ive been paying customer of both for a while, as a tutorial screencasts producer/youtuber)


👤 mvidal01

👤 PetitPrince
Kdenlive is good enough for tour usage I think.

👤 mguerville
Canva is paid but will seriously simplify your video creation process and give you assets to spruce it up

👤 darrenwestall
veed.io - happy customer here.