EditDV


EditDV is video editing software released by Radius, Inc. in late 1997 as an evolution of their earlier Radius Edit product. EditDV was one of the first products providing professional-quality editing of the then new DV format at a relatively affordable cost and was named "The Best Video Tool of 1998". Originally EditDV was available for Macintosh only but in February 2000 EditDV 2.0 for Windows was released. With version 3.0 EditDV's name was changed to CineStream.
The EditDV product family included a number of related products, all sharing a similar name:
Unlike many other applications at the time which transcoded video to M-JPEG for editing, EditDV provided lossless native editing of the DV format. Only transitions, effects and filters needed to be rendered.
EditDV was built on top of QuickTime and supported QuickTime filters as well as its own built-in effects and transitions. Effects could be animated using keyframes.
The user interface had a Project window for organising clips into bins, a Sequence window with a multi-track timeline for arranging clips into a program using three-point editing, and Source and Program monitor windows. A finished program could either be exported as a QuickTime movie or written back to DV tape using the "print to video" command.

Name changes and eventual demise

In 1999 the company Radius Inc. changed its name to Digital Origin. In 2000 Digital Origin Inc was bought by Media 100. In early 2001 Media 100 released an updated version of EditDV under the new name CineStream 3.0. Later that year Media 100 was bought by Autodesk's Discreet Division.
CineStream for Macintosh required Mac OS 9. It was never ported to Mac OS X and faced increasing competition on that platform from Apple's own Final Cut Pro application. Development of EditDV/Cinestream was officially discontinued in 2002.