Browser-based video editors have come a long way. Curious about a few things:
1. How does it handle larger files (1GB+)? Are you chunking/streaming or loading everything into memory?
2. What's the export flow like - does rendering happen client-side or do you need a server for that?
3. Any plans for collaborative editing? That's the one area where browser-based tools could really shine vs desktop apps.
Will definitely try this out. The self-hosting angle is great for teams with privacy concerns.
This is exciting - browser-based video editing has so much potential for accessibility and quick edits without heavy software installs.
Curious about a few things:
1. How are you handling memory constraints? Video editing can get memory-hungry fast, especially with longer clips or multiple tracks.
2. What's the export pipeline like? Does it render client-side or do you need a backend for encoding?
3. Any plans for collaborative editing? Self-hosted + real-time collab would be a killer combo for teams.
The CapCut-inspired UX is smart - they nailed making timeline editing feel approachable. Looking forward to trying it out.
This is exciting - browser-based video editing has come a long way with WebCodecs and OffscreenCanvas. A few questions:
1. How are you handling memory for longer videos? That's usually where browser editors hit their limits.
2. Any plans for collaborative editing? Self-hosted + realtime collab would be killer for creative teams.
The CapCut-style UX is smart - it's what creators already know. Rooting for you!
Really interesting to see a serious open-source attempt at browser-based video editing with WebCodecs. The PixiJS choice makes sense for the compositing layer.
Curious about your approach to memory management for longer projects - does the timeline keep all decoded frames in memory, or do you have some eviction strategy? Also wondering how you're handling the codec support gaps across browsers (Safari's WebCodecs is still pretty limited).
Would love to see proxy/transcoding workflows for editing larger source files. Good luck with the launch!
Love seeing open-source alternatives in the video editing space. Browser-based editing has come a long way with WebCodecs API.
What's your approach for handling longer videos? Memory management becomes tricky when you can't rely on native disk caching like desktop editors. Are you streaming segments on demand or loading everything into memory?
Happy to answer questions. We’re especially interested in feedback around performance, timeline UX, and browser limitations for video editing.