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  1. Hey, does anyone know how to do Picture-in-picture on videos like PewDiePie, but without using a paid program?

    Thursday, 13-Sep-12 19:43:40 UTC from IdentiCurse
    1. @lovetolerateandsquee Get the paid program illegally. May I repeat that doing this is illegal.

      Thursday, 13-Sep-12 19:45:30 UTC from MuSTArDroid
      1. @marshy I was actually looking for a freeware video editing software that had PiP. And I don't really want to do that.

        Thursday, 13-Sep-12 19:46:24 UTC from IdentiCurse
    2. @lovetolerateandsquee On Linux we have a few serious video editors (PiTiVi, Kdenlive, OpenShot) of which I expect at least one of them to be capable of doing that, though I'm not sure if any of them is at all. They don't run on Windows, though, only on Linux.

      Thursday, 13-Sep-12 19:47:13 UTC from web
      1. @omni Another reason I should have Linux. But I don't. Also, I have a Linux question. If you choose to run Linux and Windows in that dual-boot thing, do your files appear on both Windows and Linux? I only need Windows for iTunes, Steam, and outdated programs my school makes me use.

        Thursday, 13-Sep-12 19:52:58 UTC from IdentiCurse
        1. @lovetolerateandsquee Linux can read NTFS (Windows file system), but Windows cannot read ext4 (Linux's file system). Be mindful which partition you save to.

          Thursday, 13-Sep-12 19:54:02 UTC from web
          1. @eaglehooves Ah, so if I have a folder full of music on my Windows partition, it'll show up on Linux, but not vice versa?

            Thursday, 13-Sep-12 19:55:32 UTC from IdentiCurse
        2. @lovetolerateandsquee It depends on the way you're installing it. If you're using Wubi, or choose to install Linux on an NTFS system, Windows will be able to see your files on Linux. If you install Linux on something I think is better, like ext4, Windows won't be able to see your files on Linux. Linux, however, will be able to see your files in Windows in both cases.

          Thursday, 13-Sep-12 19:54:41 UTC from web
        3. @lovetolerateandsquee Your NTFS Windows partition will show by default in GNU/Linux but your GNU/Linux partition in your filesystem of choice won't show up in Windows by default.

          Thursday, 13-Sep-12 19:54:58 UTC from Choqok