10/04/2012

Ulead VideoStudio 9.0 Video Editor Review

Ulead VideoStudio 9.0 Video Editor
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ULEAD's Video Studio 9 has a lot to offer considering the under-$100 retail price, although there are a couple of annoying aspects to using it, and there is one glaring omission in it's feature set.
To start off this review, I downloaded and installed the trial versions of several video editors, so as to have a base of comparison. In addition to ULEAD VS9, I tried Roxio's and Pinnacle's video editors, Cyberlink Power Director, and Video Edit Magic - these are all in the same retail price category as VS9, between $49 and $100. I also tried a GPL freeware editor, ZweiStein Video Compositor from "T@B Software".
My computer came with two other packages, Windows Movie Maker (this comes with Windows XP) and Cyberlink Power Producer, and I already had some familiarity with those products.
What I was primarily looking for was a Video production package with more user-customizable features than Windows Movie Maker offers, especially Titles and Transitions; also more stability and reliability - I could not get WMM to compile and render a movie project longer than about 35 minutes without crashing or hanging (these hang-ups always required a full cold reboot to recover from). Power Producer isn't really a video editor, it's only function is to take finished videos, add a menu structure, and burn them to VCD or DVD.
As for the other trialware packages I downloaded:
1. Cyberlink Power Director refused to load and run, and I was not able to figure out why. My computer more than met the system requirement, so perhaps the archive got corrupted during the download? Anyway, I gave up on it after a couple of hours of non-success.
2. Roxio and Pinnacle. These are very similar, and might even be the same core program with different splash screens grafted on. They are VERY limited in what they can do, especially for the $89 price tag. Windows Movie Maker is a more robust video editor and it's free to download as long as you have Win XP. They also have a "fixed" application window size of 1024 x 768, a real annoyance on my system which usually runs at 1600 x 1200.
2. Video Edit Magic. Somewhat better features than Roxio/Pinnacle, but still not as much there as WMM.
3. ZweiStein. Unusual, non-intuitive user interface, very different from most other video editors. It was also pretty limited in capabilities, and again WMM has more features.
4. Windows Movie Maker. Looks like it could be a decent video editor if MicroSoft can get the bugs out of it in a future build. It's one serious shortcoming in features is that it's text title capabilities are all "pre-fabricated". You can only overlay text titles in positions pre-determined by the program, and only one block of text can exist within a title. You can at least change the font and color of a text block, but without the ability to position the text exactly where you want it, it's very frustrating if you have experience with top-end software like Adobe Premiere.
Okay, now on to ULEAD VS9. First the good news:
FEATURES: In terms of overall video editing capability, it shares the first place rating, with Adobe Premiere Elements, in the best-under-$100 Video editor category, for what's currently available (January 2006). It has a wide array of video filters and transition effects, probably more than most amateur and home users will ever need. It has significantly better text titling capabilities than any of the other packages I tried: In addition to the usual font and color controls, you can place multiple text blocks within a title frame, and each text block can have it's own individual color, font, size, position, transition, and animation settings. If you need better text title capability than WMM provides, ULEAD VS9 should satisfy almost any non-commercial video editing need. In addition to actual video files, VS9 can import and use almost any digital still photo image, to make title screens, or string together into a slide show.
STABILITY / RELIABILITY: No complaints here. On my AMD Athlon 1900 system, with 1500 megs of RAM and a Radeon Dual-head video card, VS9 has never crashed or hung up. The largest compilation I have tested was a project with 67 minutes of AVI video and 25 minutes of a still-image slide show. Remarkably, there were several instances of "Out of Memory" conditions while editing this video, where Windows 2000 popped up a warning dialog, and VS9 lost it's ability to preview/play the video clips. Amazingly, it never crashed or suffered a hang up - I just clicked "Okay" on the warning dialog box, saved the project to hard disk, then closed and and reloaded VS9 and reloaded my project. It always came back just as it was saved and I was able to continue working right where I left off. Note that VS9 can be configured to "auto-save" at user defined intervals, so an unexpected power failure or system crash won't cost you hours of lost work even if you forget to manually save when you broke for lunch (or whatever).
INPUT/OUTPUT: VS9 appears capable of importing most of the common Video formats, like AVI, MPG, MOV, WMV, and VOB. Outputs are the same. VOB is of course the file structure for DVD movies, and VS9 can compile and burn DVD-Video, VCD, and SVCD. I have not tested all of these, just DVD-Video. VS9 also claims to be able to capture video streams direct from your camera, or write back out to a camera, assuming your PC has the necessary video capture hardware and software (I have not tested these features personally). The files I used for my testing are AVI's, up to 650 megabytes each, from a Canon A-620 camera.
THE BAD NEWS:
I'll list the minor glitches first.
1. VS9's primary application window is hard-coded to be the maximum size of your video screen (or minimized to the task bar). Not being able to size the application window to be something less than maximum is really a pain when you want to do something else, like check e-mail or create a graphic in Photoshop for use as a title backdrop in VS9. When exporting your finished product (rendering it) to either a hard disk file or disc burner, you can not minimize VS9 so as to make room on screen for other tasks. This is really annoying, especially considering how slow the rendering engine is (more on this issue in the next section of the review).
2. If you run a dual-head, dual-monitor video system, VS9 can not be restricted to one monitor or the other, even if your video driver software has been set up to force all applications to a single monitor. It will occupy the entire desktop, spanning both monitors, regardless of what resolution you have set. It looks like the people who wrote and developed VS9 deliberately put code into the program to force this to happen; no Windows API-complient software should be able to over ride the one-monitor video driver setting, yet VS9 does.
Now for the real bad news: VS9's rendering engine is unbeliebably slow, taking not less than 8 to 10 minutes of real-time to render each minute of your compilation. In other words, if you have 60 minutes of home video clips that you would like to turn into a nicely edited DVD movie, with an audio track, text titling and scene transistions, the final output of your video will tie up your computer for as much as 10 hours! I'm not exaggerating here - my 67 minute video took 525 minutes to render out as DVD-VOB files, for a 7.8-to-1 rendering time ratio. Rendering was actually a two-step process: First, VS9 translated (rendered) the project input files (the 67 minutes worth of AVI video, JPG and BMP still frame titles, and MP3 audio backgound music) into MPEG-2 format, stored as a single 4500 megabyte MPG file in the scratch directory; this operation took 98% of the 525 minutes. Then, it took the MPEG-2 file and split it up into four 1000 megabyte chunks, re-writing them as VOB files in the VIDEO_TS directory. This only took 10 minutes or so, I guess MPG-2 to VOB doesn't require any additional rendering, just a straightforward file transfer from one folder to another. Still, the whole process took all night! On the plus side, I have to say that the image quality of the resulting VOB files was sharp and clear, as nice as any other home movies I've seen from a digital camera.
One other nice feature to counter the slowness complaint is that VS9 gives the user a lot of control over the rendering process, expecially the exact amount of MPEG compression (and resulting image quality degradation) that the user is willing to tolerate. Even better, VS9 has a command "Burn to Fit" that tells the program to calculate how much comopression to use so that the final output VOB files will just fit on a standard DVD-5 disc (or SVCD, whatever you are burning).
To compare rendering times: on the same 67 minute project that took VS9 525 minutes to produce the finished VOB files, Cyberlink PowerProducer required only 100 minutes, but the image quality was noticeably fuzzier. PowerProducer has only 3 quality levels, High, Standard, and Long-Play, representing three pre-set levels of MPEG compression. I guess the lack of user configurability allows Cyberlink's rendering engine to operate faster and more effieciently than ULEAD's.
As for the "glaring omission" noted above, VS9 appears to have no way to save the Menu and Chapter settings for your DVD. When you exit VS9, or if the computer crashes or there's a power failure, those settings are gone when you reboot the program. The dialog that opens when you click the "SHARE" command from VS9's main application window makes the DVD burning tools look like they might be a completely different program, written by a consultant rather than a ULEAD employee software engineer. Anyway, it's hard to believe that something so basic as a "save" command could have been forgotten, but I can't find one. Just remember that if you spend a lot...Read more›

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Ulead VideoStudio 9 is powerful video editing made easy. This easy-to-use software turns home videos into fun-to-watch movies! The two-step DV-to-DVD Wizard creates complete movies in a flash. With over 1000 customizable effects, beginners and seasoned users alike can achieve unique results in no time.

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10/03/2012

Mackie Tracktion 3 Project Bundle Review

Mackie Tracktion 3 Project Bundle
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ive used most every sequencer DAW on the market, they are all the same. if you dont know how to use a computer sequencer, mackie tracktion might not be for you. but if you do know how to use an audio sequencer, and have 3rd party plugins (i dont use any of the factory installed apps that came with the package) then there is no better value on the market, the ease of use, the implementation, is straight forward, there is one screen only to mouse over. and recording and editing is very easy. it is, however, a 32 bit application like most other sequencers for PC and mac on the market, so if your not fully tooled up for x64bit computing, and you have a selection of third party plugins, tracktion is an awesome value to get you up and running immediately.


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Adobe Flex Builder 3.0 Review

Adobe Flex Builder 3.0
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I purchased Flex Builder 3.0 in my ongoing quest to make my websites more high-tech, and yet more user-friendly. I often wish to develop applications that can run both on the web AND on a computer desktop, attached to a database. Flex supports this, running with various web servers, and supporting desktop accessibility with Adobe Air. As a ColdFusion developer, this is an attractive feature.
Flex, supported by the Eclipse platform, is still in its early stages in some ways. To be sure, Flex greatly soups up your webpages, and makes coding easier and faster. It automatically generates code that would have required programming in Actionscript before. To be super productive, you would want to learn Actionscript, anyway. Now, most of the work is done for you by Flex, so the Actionscript is mostly reserved for enhancements.
My experience with Adobe/Macromedia products is that they will pile on the toys over time. So, now is a good time to learn this platform while Flex is simple to learn. I believe it is here to stay. With my other Adobe products, Adobe offered free DVD's with selected [...] training segments. These clips enticed me to buy a year's subscription of the [...] trainings. In those tutorials, I found Flex trainings that have helped me quite a bit to attack Flex, and interface it with my existing ColdFusion setup.
Really, the only difficult part of this is the Eclipse development platform. Eclipse is open source, and for that reason, it is constantly changing. I don't always find open source tools to be user-friendly. There are lots of techy methods to get updates, snap-ons, etc. The problem? Since Eclipse is a moving target, its layout and set of tools are rearranged constantly. So, books and web tutorials concerning Flex 3 and Eclipse may be referring to a different version of Eclipse... and those tools may not be in the same place on YOUR Flex Builder platform because you have version X.3.5.2.3.11 instead of X.3.5.2.3.09. Since it is the launching pad for developing your Flex applications, you may find this frustrating.
So, Flex is a rapid application development tool, but like a sleek race car, rapid doesn't mean simple. It is not for the faint-of-heart.

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Item #: Q41377. Flex is a highly productive, free open source framework for building and maintaining expressive web applications that deploy consistently on all major browsers, desktops, and operating systems. While Flex applications can be built using only the free Flex SDK, developers can use Adobe Flex Builder 3 software to dramatically accelerate development. Product Description: Adobe Flex Builder Standard - ( v. 3 ) - complete packageCategory: Development toolsSubcategory: Development tools - web applicationsVersion: 3License Type: Complete packageLicense Qty: 1 userLicense Pricing: StandardLanguage(s): Universal EnglishPlatform: Windows, MacOSDistribution Media: DVD-ROMPackage Type: RetailOS Required: Microsoft Windows XP SP2, Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium, Apple MacOS X 10.5, Apple MacOS X 10.4.7 - 10.4.10 Customers also search for: Technology\Software\Developer Software Discount Adobe Flex Builder Standard - ( V. 3 ) - Complete Package, Buy Adobe Flex Builder Standard - ( V. 3 ) - Complete Package, Wholesale Adobe Flex Builder Standard - ( V. 3 ) - Complete Package, 0883919144627, 38044406, Developer Software

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10/02/2012

Projects in Flash 5 Review

Projects in Flash 5
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The best part about this program is that you learn to create REAL PROJECTs instead of the stupid stuff you usually see on training videos.
The instructors are great, and the production is really top-notch and very professional.
I wouldn't have been able to learn Flash so fast if it weren't for these videos. They demonstrated all the basic to the advanced features, and taught me how to really master the program.

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Holocaust Responsa Project - A Comprehensive Database of Rabbinical Responsa on matters pertaining to the Holocaust Review

Holocaust Responsa Project - A Comprehensive Database of Rabbinical Responsa on matters pertaining to the Holocaust
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This is a very significant document collection and belongs in every research library used by scholars interested in Jewish history, law and thought. The CD is the only currently available collection of most (and perhaps all?) of the responsa that were created during the Holocaust. As such, its importance cannot be overstated. Be aware that the material is in Hebrew only.
Technically, this CD has pros and cons, but more negatives, I'm afraid. On the plus side, there are printing functions, and the resulting printed pages look very good. There is some search functionality, mostly through indexes. Once you get the hang of these, they are quite useful.
On the minus side, the user interface is not what one might hope it would be. The menu-driven functionality is archaic in look and feel. The entire CD feels like a product of the pre-web nineteen eighties. In such a new product, this is a disappointment. The functions and icons are not intuitive and the help system cryptic. This CD is in need of major reengineering to bring it up to post-internet user experience standards. Even the installation is a pain, with the user forced to install software locally that is annoying to remove.


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10/01/2012

Mir-shuttle Project' English - Russian - English Dictionary Polyglossum 3.5.2 Review

Mir-shuttle Project' English - Russian - English Dictionary Polyglossum 3.5.2
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Mir-Shuttle USA-Russian (Soviet) space project 'English-Russian and Russian-English digital dictionary Polyglossum 3.52 (2005)
ISBN: 5864553042
S.V.Kurbatov
About 45,000 terms.
File of dictionary: mir_shtl.pg32 (1 285 117 bytes, 1.0Mb in zip-archive to download - circa 4 - 7 min downloads time)
Interface and Help: in English, Russian, German
Win XP - 2003
Fast and exact search by English and Russian words and phrases.
Great product!

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Roxio Easy Media Creator Suite 9 Review

Roxio Easy Media Creator Suite 9
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Before buying I downloaded some demos and liked the roxio program. Here's why.
I'm just okay at troubleshooting pcs so I feel that this program was made for someone like me. I don't want to degenerate other programs cause I don't know them so well. But I found them to be very technical and I didn't understand all the terms. Roxio is easy to understand and I could do things very quickly. I will admit that my husband takes care of the technical parts like installation and the XP fixes. I can't say anything about those things but the program has worked without trouble for me.
I wanted to learn how to fix photos and make slide shows, especially since we have a big family reunion coming up. I'm not doing special effects but I am cropping and fixing a lot of the red eyes. I also have some 5x7 and 4x 6 photos. I wanted to put them all in the same size and there is a menu item that will change a lot of photos at once. I didn't have to go to each photo and make the size change. The slide shows are incredibly easy to make. Instead of one long show I've opted to make several, categorized by decade. That way I could add different music to each show. I also like the way the program pans and scans. You can really see the photo instead of it just whizzing by.
Of course I need copies to give to everyone. I used the disc copy to make several discs. Many of the older people don't use computers much but they all have dvd players. The program makes such dvds. My husband said that the slide show is really a video so I can send it to my ipod. I plugged in the ipod and chose the video file. It did move to the ipod and I didn't have to do much. And since we will be making videos of the reunion, I will start learning how to use the video editing programs.

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Easy Media Creator Suite 9

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