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Date: 2010-01-07
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Adobe After Effects CS4 Essential Training: Applying video transitions
In this clip, host Chad Perkins shows how to apply video transitions in After Effects, which is a bit more complicated than applying video transitions in a video editing application. He shows the transitions category in After EFfects, and details how most transitions work in After Effects, detailing the parameters and transition completion, wide angle, feathering the edge, and so on.

AJA Ki Pro
Sometimes a product just makes you say 'WOW!'
Every once in a while (sometimes a long while), a product comes along that makes you say "WOW!". I haven't had one of those moments in a long time, until I got my hands on the Ki Pro from AJA. I remember sending my AJA PR rep an email when it first came out, and there was, of course, a backlog of reviewers who wanted to get their hands on one, so I went into the queue, and forgot about it.

Adobe After Effects CS4 Essential Training: Splitting a Layer
In this clip, host Chad Perkins details how to split a layer, cutting a video clip or any layer to different pieces, which is especially helpful when using B-roll footage.

Slow, Fast, Reverse, and Freeze Motion in Sony Vegas Pro
Speed ramping is a snap in Sony Vegas Pro
Changing the playback speed of video clips is a versatile way to either condense or extend them. You can accelerate sequences to show more in less time and you can slow down a section to reveal more detail. Even slight increases or decreases can be useful, such as slightly slowing down a clip to make a pan seem smoother or to lengthen a stock footage clip to fill a specific duration.

Kevin McAuliffe's Top Five Favorite Products of 2009
As many of my collegues have already written, 2009 was, how do I put this politely? Awful. The economy was (is) in the dumps and is on a slow road to recovery. That being said, 2009 was in fact a good year when it came to products being released by our favorite companies.

Adobe After Effects CS4 Essential Training: Replace footage already in the Timeline
In this clip, host Chad Perkins details how to replace footage that you've already edited. He shows how to replace a clip with another clip, and the problem is he's already color corrected the footage and removed the green screen footage, and edited and trimmed the clip in the timeline. He then shows how to delete and replace a layer, and selects the footage that will be used to replace what is in the timeline.

Adobe After Effects CS4 Essential Training: Trimming video
In this clip, host Chad Perkins covers trimming video before you add it to your composition. He shows how to trim video in the footage window, shows how to preview and trim the video in time. He shows how to set an in point and an out point. He also shows how to use the ripple insert edit button and the overlay edit button.

What is ISO, Play ISO Image on Mac, Copy DVD Movies to ISO on Mac on Mac
I. What is ISO Image? An ISO image is an archive file (also known as a disk image) of an optical disc in a format defined by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). This format is supported by many software vendors. ISO image files typically have a file extension of .iso. The name ISO is taken from the ISO 9660 file system used with CD-ROM media, but an ISO image can also contain UDF file system because UDF is backward-compatible with ISO 9660.

Boardroom: Talking story with surfing's legendary surfboard shapers
Movie shot with Panasonic AG HVX200 camcorders and edited on Avid's Media Composer
In ancient Hawaiian times, those who made surfboards used Koa wood and were revered as kahunas, building boards for royalty. On the mainland, boards were being built with Redwood in the 1920s and 1930s. In the early 1950s a cottage industry started which became the genesis of the billions dollar a year surf industry. A handful of surfers began making surfboards out of balsa, and then in the late 50s to early 60s, polyurethane-based foam.


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