Non-linear editing is a form of
offline editing for
audio,
video, and
image editing. In offline editing, the original content is not modified in the course of editing. In non-linear editing, edits are specified and modified by specialized software. A pointer-based playlist, effectively an
edit decision list (EDL), for video and audio, or a
directed acyclic graph for still images, is used to keep track of edits. Each time the edited audio, video, or image is rendered, played back, or accessed, it is reconstructed from the original source and the specified editing steps. Although this process is more computationally intensive than directly modifying the original content, changing the edits themselves can be almost instantaneous, and it prevents further
generation loss as the audio, video, or image is edited.
A non-linear editing system (NLE) is a video editing (NLVE) program or application, or an audio editing (NLAE)
digital audio workstation (DAW) system. These perform non-destructive editing on source material. The name is in contrast to 20th century methods of
linear video editing and
film editing.
In
linear video editing, the product is assembled from beginning to end, in that order. One can replace or overwrite sections of material, but never cut something out or insert extra material. Non-linear editing removes this restriction. Conventional film editing is a destructive process because the original film must be physically cut to perform an edit.
Basic techniques
A non-linear editing approach may be used when all assets are available as files on
video servers, or on local
solid-state drives or
hard disk
A hard disk drive (HDD), hard disk, hard drive, or fixed disk is an electro-mechanical data storage device that stores and retrieves digital data using magnetic storage with one or more rigid rapidly rotating platters coated with magnet ...
s, rather than recordings on reels or tapes. While linear editing is tied to the need to sequentially view film or hear tape, non-linear editing enables direct access to any
video frame in a digital
video clip, without having to play or
scrub/shuttle through adjacent
footage to reach it, as is necessary with
video tape linear editing systems.
When ingesting audio or video feeds,
metadata
Metadata is "data that provides information about other data", but not the content of the data, such as the text of a message or the image itself. There are many distinct types of metadata, including:
* Descriptive metadata – the descriptive ...
are attached to the clip. Those metadata can be attached automatically (
timecode, localization, take number, name of the clip) or manually (players names, characters, in sports). It is then possible to access any frame by entering directly the timecode or the descriptive metadata. An editor can, for example at the end of the day in the
Olympic Games
The modern Olympic Games or Olympics (french: link=no, Jeux olympiques) are the leading international sporting events featuring summer and winter sports competitions in which thousands of athletes from around the world participate in a multi ...
, easily retrieve all the clips related to the players who received a gold medal.
The non-linear editing method is similar in concept to the
cut and paste techniques used in
IT. However, with the use of non-linear editing systems, the destructive act of cutting of film negatives is eliminated. It can also be viewed as the audio/video equivalent of
word processing, which is why it is called
desktop video editing in the consumer space.
Broadcast workflows and advantages
In
broadcasting
Broadcasting is the distribution of audio or video content to a dispersed audience via any electronic mass communications medium, but typically one using the electromagnetic spectrum (radio waves), in a one-to-many model. Broadcasting began ...
applications, video and audio data are first captured to hard disk-based systems or other digital storage devices. The data are then imported into servers employing any necessary
transcoding,
digitizing or
transfer). Once imported, the source material can be edited on a computer using any of a wide range of
video editing software.
The end product of the offline non-linear editing process is a frame-accurate
edit decision list (EDL) which can be taken, together with the source tapes, to an online quality tape or film editing suite. The EDL is then read into an edit controller and used to create a replica of the offline edit by playing portions of the source tapes back at full quality and recording them to a master as per the exact edit points of the EDL.
Editing software records the editor's decisions in an EDL that is exportable to other editing tools. Many generations and variations of the EDL can exist without storing many different copies, allowing for very flexible editing. It also makes it easy to change cuts and undo previous decisions simply by editing the EDL (without having to have the actual film data duplicated).
Generation loss is also controlled, due to not having to repeatedly re-encode the data when different effects are applied. Generation loss can still occur in digital video or audio when using lossy video or audio compression algorithms as these introduce artifacts into the source material with each encoding or reencoding. Lossy compression algorithms (codecs) such as
Apple ProRes,
Advanced Video Coding and
mp3 are very widely used as they allow for dramatic reductions on file size while often being indistinguishable from the uncompressed or losslessly compressed original.
Compared to the linear method of tape-to-tape editing, non-linear editing offers the flexibility of film editing, with random access and easy project organization. In non-linear editing, the original source files are not lost or modified during editing. This is one of the biggest advantages of non-linear editing compared to linear editing. With the EDLs, the editor can work on low-resolution copies of the video. This makes it possible to edit both standard-definition broadcast quality and
high definition
High definition or HD may refer to:
Visual technologies
*HD DVD, discontinued optical disc format
*HD Photo, former name for the JPEG XR image file format
*HDV, format for recording high-definition video onto magnetic tape
* HiDef, 24 frames-pe ...
broadcast quality very quickly on desktop computers that may not have the power to process huge full-quality high-resolution data in real-time.
The costs of editing systems have dropped such that non-linear editing tools are now within the reach of home users. Some editing software can now be accessed free as
web applications; some, like
Cinelerra (focused on the professional market) and
Blender
A blender (sometimes called a mixer or liquidiser in British English) is a kitchen and laboratory appliance used to mix, crush, purée or emulsify food and other substances. A stationary blender consists of a blender container with a rotating me ...
, can be downloaded as
free software
Free software or libre software is computer software distributed under terms that allow users to run the software for any purpose as well as to study, change, and distribute it and any adapted versions. Free software is a matter of liberty, ...
; and some, like
Microsoft's
Windows Movie Maker or
Apple Inc.'s
iMovie
iMovie (known at times as iMovie HD) is a preinstalled video editing application developed by Apple Inc. for macOS, iOS, and iPadOS devices.
It was originally released in 1999 as a Mac OS 8 application bundled with the first FireWire-enabled ...
, come included with the appropriate operating system.
Accessing the material
The non-linear editing retrieves video media for editing. Because these media exist on the video server or other mass storage that stores the video feeds in a given
codec, the editing system can use several methods to access the material:
;Direct access
:The video server records feeds with a codec readable by the editing system, has network connection to the editor and allows direct editing. The editor previews material directly on the server (which it sees as remote storage) and edits directly on the server without
transcoding or
transfer.
;
Shared storage
:The video server transfers feeds to and from shared storage that is accessible by all editors. Media in the appropriate codec on the server need only transferred. If recorded with a different codec, media must be transcoded during transfer. In some cases (depending on material), files on shared storage can be edited even before the transfer is finished.
;Importing
:The editor downloads the material and edits it locally. This method can be used with the previous methods.
Editor brands
The leading professional non-linear editing software for many years has been
Avid Media Composer. This software is likely to be present in almost all post-production houses globally, and it is used for feature films, television programmes, advertising and corporate editing. In 2011, reports indicated, "Avid is still the most-used NLE on prime-time TV productions, being employed on up to 90 percent of evening broadcast shows."
Since then the rise in semi-professional and domestic users of editing software has seen a large rise in other titles becoming very popular in these areas. Other significant software used by many editors is Adobe Premiere (part of
Adobe Creative Cloud),
Apple Final Cut X,
DaVinci Resolve and
Lightworks. The take-up of these software titles is to an extent dictated by cost and subscription licence arrangements, as well as the rise in mobile apps and free software. , Davinci Resolve has risen in popularity within professional users and others alike - it had a user base of more than 2 million using the free version alone. This is a comparable user base to
Apple's Final Cut Pro X, which also had 2 million users .
Some notable NLEs are:
*
Avid Media Composer
*
Adobe Premiere Pro
*
DaVinci Resolve
*
Final Cut Pro X and its predecessor,
Final Cut Pro 7.
*
Lightworks
*
Vegas Pro
*
Shotcut
Shotcut is a free and open-source, cross-platform video, audio, and image editing program for FreeBSD, Linux, macOS and Windows. Started in 2011 by Dan Dennedy, Shotcut is developed on the MLT Multimedia Framework, in development since 200 ...
Home use
Early consumer applications using a
multimedia computer for non-linear editing of video may have a
video capture card
Video capture is the process of converting an analog video signal—such as that produced by a video camera, DVD player, or television tuner—to digital video and sending it to local storage or to external circuitry. The resulting digital data ar ...
to capture
analog video or a
FireWire connection to capture
digital video from a
DV camera, with its video editing software. Various editing tasks could then be performed on the imported video before export to another
medium, or
MPEG encoded for transfer to a
DVD.
Modern web-based editing systems can take video directly from a camera phone over a
GPRS
General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) is a packet oriented mobile data standard on the 2G and 3G cellular communication network's global system for mobile communications (GSM). GPRS was established by European Telecommunications Standards Insti ...
or
3G mobile connection, and editing can take place through a web browser interface, so, strictly speaking, a computer for video editing does not require any installed hardware or software beyond a
web browser and an
internet
The Internet (or internet) is the global system of interconnected computer networks that uses the Internet protocol suite (TCP/IP) to communicate between networks and devices. It is a ''internetworking, network of networks'' that consists ...
connection.
Nowadays there is a huge amount of home editing which takes place both on desktop and tablet/phones. The social media revolution has brought about a significant change in access to powerful editing tools o
apps at everyone's disposal.
History
When
videotapes were first developed in the 1950s, the only way to edit was to physically cut the tape with a razor blade and splice segments together. While the footage excised in this process was not technically destroyed, continuity was lost and the footage was generally discarded. In 1963, with the introduction of the
Ampex
Ampex is an American electronics company founded in 1944 by Alexander M. Poniatoff as a spin-off of Dalmo-Victor. The name AMPEX is a portmanteau, created by its founder, which stands for Alexander M. Poniatoff Excellence.AbramsoThe History ...
Editec, video tape could be edited electronically with a process known as
linear video editing by selectively copying the original footage to another tape called a ''master''. The original recordings are not destroyed or altered in this process. However, since the final product is a copy of the original, there is a generation loss of quality.
First non-linear editor
The first truly non-linear editor, the
CMX 600, was introduced in 1971 by
CMX Systems, a joint venture between
CBS and
Memorex. It recorded and played back black-and-white analog video recorded in "
skip-field" mode on modified
disk pack
Disk packs and disk cartridges were early forms of removable media for computer data storage, introduced in the 1960s.
Disk pack
A disk pack is a layered grouping of hard disk platters (circular, rigid discs coated with a magnetic data storage ...
drives the size of washing machines. These were commonly used to store about half an hour of data digitally on mainframe computers of the time. The 600 had a console with two monitors built in. The right monitor, which played the preview video, was used by the editor to make cuts and edit decisions using a
light pen. The editor selected from options superimposed as text over the preview video. The left monitor was used to display the edited video. A DEC
PDP-11
The PDP-11 is a series of 16-bit minicomputers sold by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) from 1970 into the 1990s, one of a set of products in the Programmed Data Processor (PDP) series. In total, around 600,000 PDP-11s of all models were sold, ...
computer served as a controller for the whole system. Because the video edited on the 600 was in low-resolution black and white, the 600 was suitable only for offline editing.
The 1980s
Non-linear editing systems were built in the 1980s using computers coordinating multiple
LaserDisc
The LaserDisc (LD) is a home video format and the first commercial optical disc storage medium, initially licensed, sold and marketed as DiscoVision, MCA DiscoVision (also known simply as "DiscoVision") in the United States in 1978. Its diam ...
s or banks of VCRs. One example of these tape and disc-based systems was Lucasfilm's
EditDroid, which used several LaserDiscs of the same raw footage to simulate random-access editing. EditDroid was demonstrated at NAB in 1984.
EditDroid was the first system to introduce modern concepts in non-linear editing such as timeline editing and clip bins.
The LA-based post house Laser Edit also had an in-house system using recordable random-access LaserDiscs.
The most popular non-linear system in the 1980s was
Ediflex, which used a bank of Sony JVC VCRs for offline editing. Ediflex was introduced in 1983 on the Universal series "
Still the Beaver". By 1985 it was used on over 80% of filmed network programs. In 1985 Ediflex maker, Cinedco was awarded the
Technical Emmy
The Technology and Engineering Emmy Awards, or Technology and Engineering Emmys, are one of two sets of Emmy Awards that are presented for outstanding achievement in engineering development in the television industry. The Technology and Enginee ...
for "Design and Implementation of Non-Linear Editing for Filmed Programs."
In 1984,
Montage Picture Processor was demonstrated at NAB.
Montage used 17 identical copies of a set of film rushes on modified consumer Betamax VCRs. A custom circuit board was added to each deck that enabled frame-accurate switching and playback using vertical interval timecode. Intelligent positioning and sequencing of the source decks provided a simulation of random-access playback of a lengthy edited sequence without any rerecording. The theory was that with so many copies of the rushes, there could always be one machine cued up to replay the next shot in real time. Changing the EDL could be done easily, and the results seen immediately.
The first feature edited on the Montage was Sidney Lumet's ''
Power''. Notably, Francis Coppola edited ''
The Godfather Part III'' on the system, and Stanley Kubrick used it for ''
Full Metal Jacket''. It was used on several episodic TV shows (''
Knots Landing
''Knots Landing'' is an American prime time television soap opera that aired on CBS from December 27, 1979, to May 13, 1993. A spin-off of ''Dallas'', it was set in a fictitious coastal suburb of Los Angeles and initially centered on the lives of ...
'', for one) and on hundreds of commercials and music videos.
The original Montage system won an Academy Award for Technical Achievement in 1988. Montage was reincarnated as Montage II in 1987, and Montage III appeared at NAB in 1991, using digital disk technology, which should prove to be considerably less cumbersome than the Betamax system.
All of these original systems were slow, cumbersome, and had problems with the limited computer horsepower of the time, but the mid-to-late-1980s saw a trend towards non-linear editing, moving away from film editing on
Moviolas and the linear videotape method using
U-matic VCRs. Computer processing advanced sufficiently by the end of the '80s to enable true digital imagery, and has progressed today to provide this capability in personal desktop computers.
An example of computing power progressing to make non-linear editing possible was demonstrated in the first all-digital non-linear editing system, the "Harry" effects compositing system manufactured by
Quantel in 1985. Although it was more of a video effects system, it had some non-linear editing capabilities. Most importantly, it could record (and apply effects to) 80 seconds (due to hard disk space limitations) of broadcast-quality uncompressed digital video encoded in 8-bit
CCIR 601 format on its built-in hard disk array.
The 1990s
The term ''nonlinear editing'' was formalized in 1991 with the publication of Michael Rubin's ''Nonlinear: A Guide to Digital Film and Video Editing'' (Triad, 1991)—which popularized this terminology over other terminology common at the time, including ''real-time'' editing, ''random-access'' or ''RA'' editing, ''virtual'' editing, ''electronic film'' editing, and so on.
Non-linear editing with computers as it is known today was first introduced by
Editing Machines Corp.
Editing is the process of selecting and preparing written, photographic, visual, audible, or cinematic material used by a person or an entity to convey a message or information. The editing process can involve correction, condensation, orga ...
in 1989 with the EMC2 editor, a PC-based non-linear off-line editing system that utilized magneto-optical disks for storage and playback of video, using half-screen-resolution video at 15 frames per second. A couple of weeks later that same year,
Avid introduced the Avid/1, the first in the line of their
Media Composer systems. It was based on the
Apple Macintosh computer platform (
Macintosh II systems were used) with special hardware and software developed and installed by Avid.
The video quality of the Avid/1 (and later
Media Composer systems from the late 1980s) was somewhat low (about VHS quality), due to the use of a very early version of a
Motion JPEG (M-JPEG)
codec. It was sufficient, however, to provide a versatile system for offline editing. ''
Lost in Yonkers'' (1993) was the first film edited with Avid Media Composer, and the first long-form documentary so edited was the HBO program ''Earth and the American Dream'', which won a National Primetime Emmy Award for Editing in 1993.
The NewTek
Video Toaster Flyer
The NewTek Video Toaster is a combination of hardware and software for the editing and production of NTSC standard-definition video. The plug-in expansion card initially worked with the Amiga 2000 computer and provides a number of BNC connectors ...
for the
Amiga included non-linear editing capabilities in addition to processing live video signals. The Flyer used
hard drives to store video clips and audio, and supported complex scripted playback. The Flyer provided simultaneous dual-channel playback, which let the Toaster's
video switcher perform transitions and other effects on
video clips without additional
rendering. The Flyer portion of the Video Toaster/Flyer combination was a complete computer of its own, having its own
microprocessor and
embedded software. Its hardware included three embedded
SCSI
Small Computer System Interface (SCSI, ) is a set of standards for physically connecting and transferring data between computers and peripheral devices. The SCSI standards define commands, protocols, electrical, optical and logical interface ...
controllers. Two of these SCSI buses were used to store video data, and the third to store audio. The Flyer used a proprietary
wavelet compression algorithm known as VTASC, which was well regarded at the time for offering better visual quality than comparable non-linear editing systems using
motion JPEG.
Until 1993, the Avid Media Composer was most often used for editing commercials or other small-content and high-value projects. This was primarily because the purchase cost of the system was very high, especially in comparison to the offline tape-based systems that were then in general use. Hard disk storage was also expensive enough to be a limiting factor on the quality of footage that most editors could work with or the amount of material that could be held digitized at any one time.
Up until 1992, the Apple Macintosh computers could access only 50
gigabytes of storage at once. This limitation was overcome by a digital video R&D team at the
Disney Channel led by
Rick Eye
Rick may refer to:
People
*Rick (given name), a list of people with the given name
*Alan Rick (born 1976), Brazilian politician, journalist, pastor and television personality
*Johannes Rick (1869–1946), Austrian-born Brazilian priest and mycol ...
. By February 1993, this team had integrated a long-form system that let the Avid Media Composer running on the Apple Macintosh access over seven
terabytes of digital video data. With instant access to the shot footage of an entire
movie, long-form non-linear editing was now possible. The system made its debut at the
NAB conference in 1993 in the booths of the three primary sub-system manufacturers, Avid,
Silicon Graphics and
Sony
, commonly stylized as SONY, is a Japanese multinational conglomerate corporation headquartered in Minato, Tokyo, Japan. As a major technology company, it operates as one of the world's largest manufacturers of consumer and professional ...
. Within a year, thousands of these systems had replaced
35mm film editing equipment in major motion picture studios and TV stations worldwide.
Although M-JPEG became the standard codec for NLE during the early 1990s, it had drawbacks. Its high computational requirements ruled out software implementations imposing extra cost and complexity of hardware compression/playback cards. More importantly, the traditional tape
workflow had involved editing from videotape, often in a rented facility. When the editor left the edit suite, they could securely take their tapes with them. But the M-JPEG data rate was too high for systems like Avid/1 on the
Mac and
Lightworks on PC to store the video on removable storage. The content needed to be stored on fixed hard disks instead. The secure tape paradigm of keeping your content with you was not possible with these fixed disks. Editing machines were often rented from facilities houses on a per-hour basis, and some productions chose to delete their material after each edit session, and then ingest it again the next day to guarantee the security of their content. In addition, each NLE system had storage limited by its fixed disk capacity.
These issues were addressed by a small UK company,
Eidos Interactive. Eidos chose the new
ARM-based computers from the UK and implemented an editing system, launched in Europe in 1990 at the
International Broadcasting Convention. Because it implemented its own compression software designed specifically for non-linear editing, the Eidos system had no requirement for JPEG hardware and was cheap to produce. The software could decode multiple video and audio streams at once for real-time effects at no extra cost. But most significantly, for the first time, it supported unlimited cheap removable storage. The Eidos Edit 1, Edit 2, and later Optima systems let the editor use ''any'' Eidos system, rather than being tied down to a particular one, and still keep his data secure. The Optima software editing system was closely tied to
Acorn hardware, so when Acorn stopped manufacturing the
Risc PC
The Risc PC is Acorn Computers's RISC OS/ Acorn RISC Machine computer, launched on 15 April 1994, which superseded the Acorn Archimedes. The Acorn PC card and software allows PC compatible software to be run.
Like the Archimedes, the Risc P ...
in the late 1990s, Eidos discontinued the Optima system.
In the early 1990s, a small American company called Data Translation took what it knew about coding and decoding pictures for the US military and large corporate clients and spent $12 million developing a desktop editor based on its proprietary compression algorithms and off-the-shelf parts. Their aim was to democratize the desktop and take some of Avid's market. In August 1993,
Media 100 entered the market, providing would-be editors with a low-cost, high-quality platform.
Around the same period, two other competitors provided non-linear systems that required special hardware—typically cards added to the computer system. Fast Video Machine was a PC-based system that first came out as an offline system, and later became more
online editing capable. The
Imix video cube The Imix (also known as ImMix) Video Cube is one of the first computer non-linear editing systems that was a full broadcast quality online video finishing machine. After its release in 1994, Imix released a more advanced version, the Imix Turbo Cub ...
was also a contender for media production companies. The Imix Video Cube had a control surface with faders to allow mixing and shuttle control. Data Translation's Media 100 came with three different JPEG codecs for different types of graphics and many resolutions. These other companies caused tremendous downward market pressure on Avid. Avid was forced to continually offer lower-priced systems to compete with the Media 100 and other systems.
Inspired by the success of Media 100, members of the
Premiere
A première, also spelled premiere, is the debut (first public presentation) of a play, film, dance, or musical composition.
A work will often have many premières: a world première (the first time it is shown anywhere in the world), its first ...
development team left Adobe to start a project called "Keygrip" for Macromedia. Difficulty raising support and money for development led the team to take their non-linear editor to the
NAB Show. After various companies made offers, Keygrip was purchased by Apple as Steve Jobs wanted a product to compete with Adobe Premiere in the desktop video market. At around the same time, Avid—now with Windows versions of its editing software—was considering abandoning the Macintosh platform. Apple released
Final Cut Pro in 1999, and despite not being taken seriously at first by professionals, it has evolved into a serious competitor to entry level's Avid's systems.
DV
Another leap came in the late 1990s with the launch of
DV-based video formats for consumer and professional use. With DV came
IEEE 1394 (FireWire/iLink), a simple and inexpensive way of getting video into and out of computers. Users no longer had to convert video from