Edward Hervey started working on PiTiVi in December 2003 After his graduation, Hervey was hired by
Fluendo to work on
GStreamer for the following two years, In the past there have been several video editors available for Linux, but, they were considered difficult to use.
Ubuntu Community Manager
Jono Bacon stated "Back in 2006, the video editing situation was looking far more exciting. Michael Dominik was working on the hugely exciting Diva project and Edward Hervey was working on PiTiVi. Both combined exciting technologies, being built on the formidable foundations of
GTK,
GNOME,
GStreamer, and Cairo. Diva was developed using Mono, and PiTiVi using Python. With the video buzz in the air, Michael and Edward both demoed their projects at the Villanova
GUADEC to rapturous applause". In response to this, Jeff Fortin, one of the project developers raised concerns regarding the reasons given for removing Pitivi from the set of default applications and voiced disappointment in Canonical/Ubuntu not supporting the application as they would have been expected to.
Rework Edward Hervey announced the availability of GStreamer Editing Services (GES) at the end of 2009. Further confirmations of intentions to migrate Pitivi to GES came at the Meego conference in 2011 but it was not until the 0.15 release in September 2011 that Thibault Saunier officially announced that the next Pitivi release would be based upon GES. The first version using GES was 0.91 "Charming Defects", released in October 2013. Due to the new engine, a lot of old code could be removed and the Pitivi codebase underwent massive reorganization, cleanup and refactoring. technological migrations: • Porting the user interface to GTK 3 • Porting from static Python bindings
PyGTK to
PyGObject, which uses
GObject Introspection • Porting from GStreamer 0.10 to GStreamer 1.0 During the final stages of these changes leading to the 0.91 release, the timeline was also ported from the
Canvas (scene graph) "GooCanvas" to
Clutter.
Re-branding as Pitivi With the release of 0.91,
PiTiVi was renamed
Pitivi, without the "T" and "V" capitalized.
Fundraising In February 2014 the project announced that it was seeking
€100,000 for further development. The money was to be allocated, as follows: Phase 1 - €35,000 to improve stability for a version 1.0 release. Phase 2 - Improving features, €1,925 for adding a magnetic time-line, €4,400 for interfaces for multi-camera editing, €4,766 for porting to
Mac OS X. The fundraising was conducted through the
GNOME Foundation. The fundraiser did not meet its targeted amount, reaching slightly above €23,000 , allowing for partially funded development. == Features ==