From: Reinhard A. <pr...@we...> - 2003-08-25 12:23:25
|
kde...@li... schrieb am 24.08.03 14:30:21: > Well, MovieDV has "vertical" "zoom" levels for the timeline, i.e. > audio level 1: thin band (about half the width what is now video in Kden) > audio level 2: same width as video, with a wave form inside. Apropos zooming: I am still dreaming of zooming this way ... holding the "Z" key down and changing the zoom state by pressing the ... - Up arrow to zoom in vertical - Down arrow to zoom out vertical - Right arrow to zoom in horizontal - Left arrow to zoom out horizontal ... but this kind of shortcut isn't assignable in the shortcut dialog. So is there a way to make this possible? Provide that you guys like this!! ;-) But maybe this could be also pretty helpful just like that way: for In/Out points - hold the "I" or "O" key down and press/hold the left/right arrow to move the In/Out point to left/right - hold the "I" or "O" key down and press the Up/Down arrow to swap the focus to the next/previous I/O point greetings Reinhard |
From: Reinhard A. <pr...@we...> - 2003-08-26 08:21:48
|
kde...@li... schrieb am 24.08.03 14:30:21: > > On Sunday 24 August 2003 10:07 am, Jason Wood wrote: > > For the interface, I will probably follow the way that Premier uses, which > > is that conceptually, video and sound are totally separate. When a video is > > placed on the timeline, it has a sound and video track that are "linked" > > together. > > Yes, MovieDV does it the same way, I think it makes sense and is standard. > > > The disadvantages - well it means that for every video clip, you have two > > clips on the timeline. just an idea; what about provide several view modes? - showing video thumbnails only (so audio is embedded into the shown clip) - showing audio peaks only - showing both in separate tracks So user could have a clean focus when working on audio only; also the refresh time of the gui should be faster on slow machines. greetings reinhard |