Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
My Movie With Audio
i had to got to google images and save the pictures in my s drive but i was saving them on my USB because that's where i save everything. so i couldn't get my pictures to show while the movie was playing so with LAura's advice i saved it on my s drive. to get the pictures on movie maker you just go to import pictures and import them. you drag the pictures to the story board squares and there we go you have your images for your so called movie. you then have to impoirt your audio and then you drag it to the timeline. to adjust how long you want the pictures to show for you drag the side of the picture left or right depending on how long it'd supposed to show for. to adjust how much of the audio you want to play, you drag the side of the audio and it trims the parts you don't want. to do the adjusting i did it in the timeline form. it's all really straight forward because even i could use it and i've only ever used it once.
Saturday, May 16, 2009
ringtone
Monday, May 4, 2009
Intro To Video
the screen then you might see the following illustration 8. there are 3 different TV standards around the world and the standard you receive depends on the country you're living in. the USA, Canada, Japan, Korea and Mexico use the format NTSC and the frame rate is 29.97 frames/sec. Australia, China, most of Europe and South America use the format PAL and the frame rate is 25 frames/sec. France, the Middle East and most of Africa use the format SECAM and the frame rate is 25 frames/sec. sooo basically the main difference is the quality of the resolution and the frame rate.
9. us Aussies use the format PAL which may i remind you is a frame rate of 25 frames/sec.
10. if you're recording with an analog camcorder then you will need a video capture card to digitalize it.
11. we won't need a video capture card for the video we are making at school because it will already be digital to begin with.
12. an IEEE 1394 is the connection between your digital camcorder and your computer when you feed the video onto the computer after shooting it.
13. digital video cameras use video compression because when it's uncompressed it's an enormous amount of data and when viewing/editing it, it would slow down your computer a lot.
14. a codec handles the compression and decompression of video. they can be found in hardware like capture cards or in software.
15. generation loss is when the quality gets worse and worse as you copy or transfer. sir explained it this way : if you photocopy something it's not quite as good quality as the original and if you photocopy that photocopy then the quality will be even worse and if you keep photocopying every photocopy then you will probably end up with a big blob that doesn't really look like anything. the way i explained it, it probably doesn't make sense but anyways.....
