A few more hardware and software suggestions from Curt Chandler's workshop:
Video editing
Curt recommends Sony Vegas as video editing software that’s a little easier to learn (and less expensive) than Apple's Final Cut Express or Final Cut Pro.
(And from Jim: For entry-level video editing, try iMovie, which comes free with newer Macs as part of the iLife suite. Windows also includes a free video editor, Windows Movie Maker. It works for very basic stuff, but it lacks some needed features like the ability to overlay multiple video tracks.)
Video camera
Curt, a pro photographer, shoots video with a Canon XH A1. That's pretty high-end for newspaper Web sites. It's an HD video camera -- not important for the Web, but important for taking frame grabs and using them as still photos for print. If you want to do frame grabs, use a camera that shoots progressive video, not interlaced video. Progressive captures whole frames. Interlaced captures half frames that your brain assembles into a full image.
Generally it's a good idea to record on tape, not the video camera’s hard drive. This becomes important because in most smaller newsrooms, the camera is also used as a tape deck to capture video to the computer. If you fill up the hard drive, you have to unload it before someone else can use the camera.
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
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