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Posted by P.C. Ford on 12/07/05 03:04
On Tue, 6 Dec 2005 21:23:46 -0500, "Mike Kujbida"
<kujfamNoSpam@xplornet.com> wrote:
>
>P.C. Ford wrote:
>> On Tue, 6 Dec 2005 16:25:26 -0800, "Richard Crowley"
>> <richard.7.crowley@intel.com> wrote:
>>
>>> "P.C. Ford" wrote ...
>>>> "Richard Crowley" wrote:
>>>>> Watch out for Camtasia. In addition to being expensive, they
>>>>> have their own required codec.
>>>
>>>> Thanks.
>>>> It is more expensive than I expected. But there is a 30 day trial. I
>>>> did notice that there was a proprietary codec. But I don't
>>>> understand why that makes a difference to me.
>>>
>>> How are you going to distribute the program? Whomever you
>>> want to be able to read it must install the Camtasia codec. Dunno
>>> how complex this is for your potential viewers? We have found
>>> distributing WMV much better than AVI.
>>
>> Ok, thanks again Richard.
>>
>> The Powerpoint will become part of a video of a Powerpoint
>> presentation. That is, we want to edit the Powerpoint into DV footage
>> of the presenter.
>>
>> Trouble here?
>
>
>It hasn't been mentioned here yet (which truly surprises me) so I'll suggest
>it. Rent a decent scan convertor and make your life a lot simpler. I just
>did this a few weeks ago (the presenter wanted to keep all the "wonderful"
>PPT transitions). Connected the video out directly to my NLE's input. Now
>I can anything with it I want to .
Yes. Don't know why I didn't think of that. We're using a scan
converter on another part of the project.
Any problem resizing the resolution?
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