Old OpenShot Video Editor Versions
Downloads
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- OpenShot Video Editor Download
- OpenShot Video Editor 64-bit Windows Installer
- Antivirus
- 0 / 14
- Version
- 3.1.1
- Size
- 188.3 MB
- File
- Signature
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- OpenShot Video Editor Download
- OpenShot Video Editor 32-bit Windows Installer
- Antivirus
- 0 / 14
- Version
- 3.1.1
- Size
- 187.1 MB
- File
- Signature
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- OpenShot Video Editor Download
- OpenShot Video Editor Linux App Image
- Antivirus
- 0 / 14
- Version
- 3.1.1
- Size
- 228.8 MB
- File
- Signature
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- OpenShot Video Editor Download
- OpenShot Video Editor macOS DMG
- Antivirus
- 0 / 14
- Version
- 3.1.1
- Size
- 247.6 MB
- File
- Signature
Old OpenShot Video Editor Versions
This page is the historical package archive for OpenShot Video Editor. It covers version 3.1.1 and is separate from the current OpenShot Video Editor page, which records 3.5.1.
A historical page is most useful when it answers concrete version questions. Here, the package names, version labels, platforms, and available integrity records provide that context without repeating the current Video Editors review.
OpenShot Video Editor Version Archive
There are 4 preserved packages on this page. Together they represent 3.1.1 and include builds identified for 64-bit Windows Installer, 32-bit Windows Installer, Linux App Image, and macOS DMG.
The preserved filenames include OpenShot-v3.1.1-x86_64.exe, OpenShot-v3.1.1-x86.exe, OpenShot-v3.1.1-x86_64.AppImage, and OpenShot-v3.1.1-x86_64.dmg. File extensions indicate EXE, APPIMAGE, and DMG packaging, which matters because an installer, compressed archive, and platform-specific image are not interchangeable even when they share a version number.
- Archived versions: 3.1.1.
- Recorded platforms: 64-bit Windows Installer, 32-bit Windows Installer, Linux App Image, and macOS DMG.
- Package formats: EXE, APPIMAGE, and DMG.
- Stored package records: 4; records with checksums: 4.
Working With Archived OpenShot Video Editor Releases
An older OpenShot Video Editor release may be relevant when maintaining a legacy system, reproducing a historical workflow, testing an upgrade path, or confirming which build produced an existing file or configuration. Those are compatibility and documentation cases, not evidence that an older build is generally preferable.
Archived software should be treated as compatibility material. Confirm why the old release is needed, preserve a rollback path, and avoid using it with important data until its behavior has been tested in the intended environment.
Package and Platform Compatibility
Platform coverage in this archive includes 64-bit Windows Installer, 32-bit Windows Installer, Linux App Image, and macOS DMG. That information should be read together with each filename, especially where the inventory contains both installers and portable or compressed distributions.
This inventory uses EXE, APPIMAGE, and DMG package formats. Retaining the full filename is useful because version, architecture, language, and packaging clues are often encoded there even when the visible release label is brief.
Checksums and File Identification
4 of the 4 archived package records include stored checksum data. The recorded algorithms are MD5, SHA1, and SHA256, allowing a retained file to be compared with the historical inventory before it is used.
Stored hashes are most useful as part of a broader audit trail. Keep the version, filename, package format, source context, and calculated digest together so the historical record can be reproduced.
Choosing Between Old and Current Versions
For comparison, the main page currently records 3.5.1; this page retains 3.1.1. Use the current page for the present package set and this archive only when an exact older release is required.
The latest OpenShot Video Editor package page should be the default reference for new installations. Keep an older package for controlled compatibility work, and document the reason for retaining it.
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