Comments

johnebaker wrote on 7/13/2014, 1:57 AM

Hi

This is  a user forum not Magix support. 

. . . . on platform steam . . .

What does this mean - you wish to get the software through Steam? If so there is no need to..

If you mean Magix Movie Edit Touch then you can download it from the Windows App store see here or for Android from Google Play see here..

If you mean Movie Edit Pro then you can download test version from the Magix website here.

HTH

John

 

 

 

Last changed by johnebaker on 7/13/2014, 1:57 AM, changed a total of 1 times.

VPX 16, Movie Studio 2025, and earlier versions 2015 and 2016, Music Maker Premium 2024.

PC - running Windows 11 23H2 Professional on Intel i7-8700K 3.2 GHz, 16GB RAM, RTX 2060 6GB 192-bit GDDR6, 1 x 1Tb Sabrent NVME SSD (OS and programs), 2 x 4TB (Data) internal HDD + 1TB internal SSD (Work disc), + 6 ext backup HDDs.

Laptop - Lenovo Legion 5i Phantom - running Windows 11 23H2 on Intel Core i7-10750H, 16GB DDR4-SDRAM, 512GB SSD, 43.9 cm screen Full HD 1920 x 1080, Intel UHD 630 iGPU and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB GDDR6)

Sony FDR-AX53e Video camera, DJI Osmo Action 3 and Sony HDR-AS30V Sports cams.

cpc000cpc wrote on 7/13/2014, 4:45 AM

Or maybe Warszawa means the steam OS http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SteamOS in which case I'd say MEP is only an option if Steam can run some sort of Windows simulation, eg:

http://www.howtogeek.com/133515/4-ways-to-run-windows-software-on-linux/

https://www.linux.com/learn/answers/view/849-how-do-i-run-windows-software-on-linux

Regards,

Carl

gandjcarr wrote on 7/13/2014, 1:13 PM

Hi,

The Steam OS is a Debian Linux based operating system primarily used for gaming.  The product you refer to is a little confusing.  You first refer to Mobile Movie Creator, then ask about testing Movie Edit...  Even if it did run on Debian Linux, why would anyone want to capture video from a gaming system on a mobile device?   As Carl suggested, most Magix products run on the Windows OS, some are available on MAC but I have never seen one that was compatible with Linux let alone the Debian version of Linux.  If by "some codes" you mean access to source code, you definitely will not get it here, or are you likely to get it from Magix although you could try writing to Magix support.  I think that you may be way too involved in the Linux open source phenomena and your flavor of choice is Debian?...Red Hat maybe, but Debian, I don't know.  As Carl suggests, see if Debian has a Windows emulator (which I seriously doubt) then if it is any good you should be able to run pretty much any windows based application.

George

ps, I could not get your youtube video to play so I have no idea what it was about.