| | Hardware Setting up to do video editing on the PC is slightly different than it is on the Mac, mainly because PCs are put together by many different companies. This means that an individual PC may not have all the components required for DV editing. The good news is that these components can be added to the computer. The bad news is that it may be necessary to open up the case and fiddle with the insides, which requires some basic knowledge. Alternatively, there are specialised companies that deal in 'turnkey' PC workstations, or a local computer vendor will be able to install the necessary components into an existing PC for a small fee. Basic hardware requirements To edit miniDV video on a PC (or Mac) you need an IEEE1394 connection, often known by its proprietary name of Firewire. (Sony's version, which uses 4-pin rather than 6-pin connections, is called i.Link). This links the camcorder to the computer, enabling the transfer of digital video between the tape in the camera and the hard drive. The computer must have sufficient RAM to edit (128Mb or more, depending on the programme) and a large and fast hard drive (10-20 Gb or more, the larger the better) on which to store the captured video. Upgrading an older PC Many modern PCs are built with these three components in place and will edit video given an appropriate software package. Older PCs may lack one or more of these features and will need to be modified. A basic Firewire card costs from £20 to £30 and slots into the comptuer's motherboard, the socket appearing at the back of the computer with the rest of the plugs. Cards bundled with software are a little more expensive, but make the software cheaper to buy than it is separately. Additional RAM is also plugged directly into sockets on the motherboard. Additional hard drives are fitted in special drive bays within the computers case, and are connected to the motherboard using 'IDE' cables (you can avoid opening up your computer by connecting an external hard drive to the Firewire or USB2 ports). Software Once you have sorted out the hardware you will need to select a program to capture and edit your video footage. Editing software can be roughly grouped into 'free', 'lower-end' (< £100), and 'higher-end' (> £250). The cheaper programs tend to be simpler to learn but offer fewer features, and much less control over how you work, where your video is stored on the computer and how it can be output. Control over additional audio tracks, for example, can be very poor or non-existent. Such features will almost certainly become important to you once you have grasped the basics of video editing. Higher-end programs will also give you advanced features such as control over the transparency of overlay tracks (additional video tracks above the main video track), special effects such as 'picture in picture' (smaller video running in a 'box' over the main video) and chromakeying (making transparent the parts of a video in one particular colour, usually green or blue, used to put weather forecasters in front of their maps on TV or to enable Superman to fly). You may see these as gimmicky add-ons or as vital features, depending on how and what you edit. Some companies offer special prices for upgrading from their basic editor to their more advanced packages. This can be a good route for those not sure how deeply they will be delving into this world. Free programmes All Apple computers come with iMovie, their basic editing program, preinstalled. With Windows XP, Microsoft have followed suit, bundling Windows MovieMaker 2. Both programs offer a low-frills but functional introduction to editing video. Though they differ in some details, both programs stress ease of use and offer simple interfaces with video viewable as thumbnails in a storyboard layout or on a timeline. They each feature a single track of video with its associated audio, plus one (MovieMaker) or two (iMovie) additional audio tracks. Compression is said to be better in Movie Maker, but preview to an external video monitor or TV via the camcorder is only available in iMovie. | | | ' | | | | | | |  | | | | 
| | | | | | | | | | | Apple iMovie | | | | Microsoft Movie Maker | | | | | | | | | Pinnacle Studio 8 At the budget end of the paying options for PC, the market leader is the Pinnacle Studio range of software - now up to version 8 (the Studio DV package comes complete with a firewire card, and the Studio Deluxe offers analog video capture aswell as DV import). This software is feature packed and easy to use. | | | | |  | | | | | | | | | | | | | | There have been some concerns about the stability and ease of installation of some Pinnacle software in the past but with Studio they seem to have got the basics more or less right. DVD burning from within Studio 8 is still apparently a hit and miss affair. Capture, editing and output to tape are very straightforward, and audio features are excellent for a package of this price. | | | | |  | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Sonic Foundry VideoFactory Alternative packages worth considering include Sonic Foundry VideoFactory and Ulead Video Studio. Sonic Foundry's VideoFactory has a more sophisticated interface than the Pinnacle product, with all activities occuring within the same workspace. Audio tools are again excellent, and it is a stable and reliable product with a cheap ugrade path to the more fully featured Vegas Video. | | | | |  | | | | | | | | | | | | Adobe Premiere The standard high-end package for many years was Adobe Premiere. Some of the lustre has been knocked off this product by more recent entries into the market, in particular Vegas Video by Sonic Foundry, and Edition DV from Pinnacle which incorporated from their inception many of the cutting edge features (in particular software realtime preview of transitions, effects, etc) than have appeared in the rather staid Adobe offering. Premiere, however, by virtue of being bundled with many of the more sophisticated capture cards, remains the market leader and de facto standard. Premiere Pro, which will offer many new professional features and only runs Windows XP, is due for launch in August 2003. | | |  | | | | | | | | | | Capturing video With hardware and software in place and working, editing on a PC is (more or less) the same as editing on a Mac. Footage is captured to the hard drive, imported into an editing program, arranged into a logical order and output back to tape or compressed for CD, DVD or web.Capture Once the hardware and software are installed, the basics of video editing are remarkably simple. Particularly with the cheaper software, much of the process is automated. Once a DV camcorder is plugged into the Firewire port, it can be controlled from within the software, which will check the camera is switched on. Pressing a capture button will begin the camera playing and start copying the tape onto the computer. The captured video will automatically appear in the 'bin' or 'shelf' divided into the individual shots you took. One disadvantage with Premiere compared to Studio and other lower-end programs is in capturing footage. With Premiere, one is more or less obliged to go through the tape noting down which portions to capture via their timecode, typing this information into the program as a batch capture list then allowing it to to go back through the tape to actually capture the footage. There is a workaround for this in the form of a small stand-alone program called Scenalyzer that will split the footage on capture (into separate files) that can then be imported into Premiere - it costs £22 as a download from http://www.scenalyzer.com/main.html. Editing Dragging and dropping these individual clips into the 'timeline' will add them to your film. You can order them, change their lengths by adjusting their 'in' and 'out' points (and/or by changing the speed at which the video plays), and insert transitions between individual clips. Special effects can be added to individual clips - they, along with the transiitions will need to render before they can be viewed at full quality. It is very useful if you can connect up a TV or video monitor so as to be able to view your work in its 'native' format (video never truly plays smoothly on a computer monitor due to differences in the way the images are processed for video and computer). Additional sound tracks can be added from CD or other sound files on your computer, or a voiceover commentary can be recorded and superimposed over the 'dialogue track'. In most programs the levels of these different audio components can be varied to stress one element or another as the program progresses. Some programs will also allow a degree of 'audio sweetening' via their audio effects (vary the bass or treble, add reverb or chorus, etc.). Output The completed film can be 'exported' to tape on your camcorder. This gives you the highest quality video. Alternatively you can save your production as a file on your hard drive, either at full resolution or at reduced resolution if you want to put the production on CD, DVD or on the internet as streaming video. All the programs mentioned have a variety of presets for the most common formats and settings. © 2003 Media Education Wales | | | | | | | | |