This lesson discusses organizing clips in Final Cut Pro X using events, keywords, ratings and notes. It covers:
1. Organizing clips by manually assigning keywords, ratings clips, and creating smart collections to arrange media for easy access.
2. Using the event library and browser to organize, sort, filter and find clips by applying metadata like keywords, ratings and notes.
3. Adding user metadata like keywords, ratings and notes to clips to customize clip organization for a faster workflow. Keywords are applied by creating collections in the event library and browser.
iMovie is a proprietary video editing software application sold by Apple Inc. for the Mac and iOS (iPhone, iPad, iPad Mini and iPod Touch). Try it. You gone love this.
Adobe Captivate: The Swiss Army Knife of Visual Help AuthoringScott Abel
Presented by Neil Perlin at Documentation and Training West, May 6-9, 2008 in Vancouver, BC.
For years, software training was largely text-based… add screen shots in a document, add some text with descriptions and instructions, and voila! The result worked, but how much more effective might it be if someone actually walked you through the steps on the screen? That’s where Adobe Captivate comes in, letting you create that someone.
The primary use of Captivate is to help capture what’s on the screens as you perform a software-based task, such as using a feature in Word. That series of screen shots is effectively a set of frames that users can play back as a movie that shows how to perform the task. To make the movie more useful, you can add explanations and instructions in text or audio form, special effects, even interactivity features that let simulate real software operations. With these features, Captivate lets you create demonstrations, sales training simulations, marketing presentations, tutorials, even fairly sophisticated e-learning. With a few tweaks, you can even use Captivate as an ad hoc usability test recorder.
Captivate movies are Flash-based, but you dont have to know Flash or touch any code. Better still, Captivate is quick and easy to learn compared to traditional CBT authoring tools—two days to get up and running, and cheap —US$700.
This workshop presents a quick overview of Captivates basic features in order to provide an overview of the tool as a whole.
Creating and Managing the Global Social Media ProjectSamuel Edsall
Emerging technologies, such as social media, are useful tools in the teaching of new techniques, the retrieval of rapidly changing information and the preparation of a globally aware society. This presentation will demonstrate the process of creating and managing a site- oriented research project for a global social media course. Examples drawn from the course will illustrate the essential components of the assignment.
iMovie is a proprietary video editing software application sold by Apple Inc. for the Mac and iOS (iPhone, iPad, iPad Mini and iPod Touch). Try it. You gone love this.
Adobe Captivate: The Swiss Army Knife of Visual Help AuthoringScott Abel
Presented by Neil Perlin at Documentation and Training West, May 6-9, 2008 in Vancouver, BC.
For years, software training was largely text-based… add screen shots in a document, add some text with descriptions and instructions, and voila! The result worked, but how much more effective might it be if someone actually walked you through the steps on the screen? That’s where Adobe Captivate comes in, letting you create that someone.
The primary use of Captivate is to help capture what’s on the screens as you perform a software-based task, such as using a feature in Word. That series of screen shots is effectively a set of frames that users can play back as a movie that shows how to perform the task. To make the movie more useful, you can add explanations and instructions in text or audio form, special effects, even interactivity features that let simulate real software operations. With these features, Captivate lets you create demonstrations, sales training simulations, marketing presentations, tutorials, even fairly sophisticated e-learning. With a few tweaks, you can even use Captivate as an ad hoc usability test recorder.
Captivate movies are Flash-based, but you dont have to know Flash or touch any code. Better still, Captivate is quick and easy to learn compared to traditional CBT authoring tools—two days to get up and running, and cheap —US$700.
This workshop presents a quick overview of Captivates basic features in order to provide an overview of the tool as a whole.
Creating and Managing the Global Social Media ProjectSamuel Edsall
Emerging technologies, such as social media, are useful tools in the teaching of new techniques, the retrieval of rapidly changing information and the preparation of a globally aware society. This presentation will demonstrate the process of creating and managing a site- oriented research project for a global social media course. Examples drawn from the course will illustrate the essential components of the assignment.
User Manuel for Wondershare Video Editor Windows V. 4.8+Liza Brown
This user manual includes the following topics:
01. Introduction
02. Get Started - Download/Install/Register/Update/Uninstall
03. Create Projects
04. Import and Organize Media File
05. Basic Editing - Split/Rotate/Crop/Merge
06. Advanced Editing - Power Tools
07. Work with Audio -Add/Edit Audio File
08. Insert Transitions
09. Use Texts and Intro/Credit
10. Apply Special Effects
11. Add Overlay Clips (PIP)
12. Save and Share
a. Want this video editing tool? http://www.wondershare.com/video-editor/ to download at free.
b. Want to watch this user manual online? http://www.wondershare.com/video-editor/guide.html
c. Want to watch video tutorial? Go https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8567DmojT8Ca3oZQlKip9w
OS: This is the complete user manual of Wondershare Video Editor (Windows Version 4.8+), which spent almost one week for me to finish all details. But there is still some new features didn't include like Split Screen, Green Screen and so on. But you can find all missing video tutorials in my YouTube Channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8567DmojT8Ca3oZQlKip9w
and
https://www.youtube.com/user/Wondershare
Creating a Single Source of Truth: Leverage all of your data with powerful an...Looker
With a centralized data store, the entire spectrum of analytics is at your fingertips. Using Looker & Segment, you can collect, store and analyze everything from click-stream and event data to transactional and behavioral data in your data warehouse.
Some of the topics this webinar will include:
-The advantages of a centralized data warehouse with Segment Warehouses
-Creating a data model to get your company on the same page with Looker Blocks
-Putting it all together: Best practices for making your data accessible to your end users
Surviving the Transition to DITA: Trusted Partners can Ease the PainNicki L. Davis, Ph.D.
Many companies are moving their content to DITA, a process that can be daunting for players who are new to such migrations and might not fully understand what they are getting into. In this practical, from-the-trenches presentation, you’ll learn from the experience of a team of 8 writers tasked with converting 10,000 pages of unstructured legacy content into structured (“intelligent”) DITA content. We describe problems encountered and provide suggestions for making things go more smoothly. A critical factor in the success of the project was the use of expert partners for some tasks. The net result was clearer, more usable content and greater expertise for the writing team at a substantial savings over doing it all ourselves.
Software development, by its nature, is a series of translations and compromises. What the end user wants, what the customer is willing to pay for, and what is technically feasible rarely combine to form a unified set of features. A deeper understanding between technical and non-technical people is needed, in particular at the communication divide between stakeholders and developers. We will show you how to develop a domain-specific, ubiquitous language and how to use your code base as the central source for your requirements and documentation, to improve communication for the whole team.
User Story Writing & Estimation For Testers By Mahesh VaradharajanAgile Testing Alliance
This session aims to introduce the critical aspects of user story formulation like INVEST principle, requirements hierarchy in Agile - with focus on aspects related to Agile Testing, such that it fits into the overall theme of the event. Through an exercise, with Lego blocks, the session will address the following aspects: Testability of user stories and importance of acceptance criteria. Handling NFRs - either as part of acceptance criteria or a new user stories. DoD and accommodating testing efforts as part of user story estimation; Defects as user stories. Dependency management between user stories via story maps.
Talk including Demo for the learning objectives outlined above
The Black Hole of Video Analytics- KISSmetrics / Viddler WebinarViddler Inc.
Eric McClatchy, Marketing Manager of Viddler, presented a video analytics webinar for KISSmetrics.
"The Black Hole of Video Analytics" prevents your ability to relate your video analytics to your website goals and metrics, severely limiting the insights your video analytics can bring.
Topics Covered:
- What is the "Black Hole"
- How to Avoid the "Black Hole"
- Advanced video reports and charts
- Experiments to improve video effectiveness
Five ways to improve Quality and Productivity of your DevelopmentJonas Rapp
There are as many development techniques as there are developers, and there are just as many tools and frameworks that can make or break your process.
I will show you a few community tools and techniques that will get you up to speed for efficient development for the Dynamics 365 platform, with primary focus on C# and Customer Engagement (CRM).
• Visual Studio extensions
• C# Extensions to SDK classes
• Base classes doing all your boring plumbing
• VSTS Build extensions
• XrmToolBox tools taking you the last kilometer
This is a session for those who are not afraid of seeing C# and enjoy watching live coding without safety net!
Defining a Minimum Viable Product (MVP)Eric Swenson
So you’ve begun the product development process. But there’s more to consider as a product manager. How do you know when you’ve built something sufficient as the initial product launch? How can you manage to continually iterate improvements to that product, once it’s been launched? Session Two addresses the challenge of delivering functionality with integrity!
This presentation was provided by Eric Swenson of Swensonia Consulting, during Session Two of the NISO event "Agile Product and Project Management for Information Products and Services," held on May 21, 2020.
Alex Podopryhora - Selling across multiple channels made easyMeet Magento Italy
The heydays of conventional “brick and mortar” as well as catalogue channels are over. The online multichannel transformation has made it more difficult for businesses to acquire and retain shoppers; it has added major challenges to a product online visibility and stock management. But all this can be addressed with new strategies while managing multichannel complexities.
What are the main online marketplaces?
What multi channel solution choices are available?
What is 3rd generation multi-channel software?
How to succeed with very little or no budget?
Alex Podopryhora (co-founder of M2E Pro) answers those questions in great detail and shows how to start selling across multiple channels in no time.
Teaching in the Distracted Age: What Students Expect from Online Courses - P...Samuel Edsall
Most students today will enroll in at least some online classes during their academic career. However, online pedagogy has a reputation of lacking interaction, instantaneous communication, or visual tools to assist in instruction. The purpose of this presentation will be to share student expectations in an introductory media online class and how these expectations were met through the use of social media, smartphone applications, and screen-capturing applications.
Securing Attention: How to Teach the Selfie Culture - Serena CarpenterSamuel Edsall
A common theme among futurists is that the individual is king. This perspective challenges traditional approaches to teaching students. This presentation will address how to teach to students immersed in selfie and performance cultures.
Digitizing the Classroom for the Online Environment - John HebbelerSamuel Edsall
The focus of this presentation will be on the conversion and application of a traditional media production course to an online class. Topics include the process involved in converting the traditional classroom experience to an online environment, effectively presenting information to users in the online environment, evaluation of digital media projects, and digital tools that enhance online pedagogy.
Applying Classroom Research to Improve Online Course Communication - Paul He...Samuel Edsall
We know a lot about what stimulates students in the classroom--but can we apply it to online coursework? There are a number of routes to effective teaching, even online--here's what the research says, and what you can do to move from just "high tech," to "high touch," online.
Education on the Move: Mobile Technologies, Online Platforms, and Pedagogy - ...Samuel Edsall
Education with mobile technologies and online platforms is, for the most part, education on the move. It is education that is convenient to populations of students who for whatever reason cannot commit to site- and time-specific class meetings. This kind of education serves a good purpose, by making education available to demographics of students, who, without mobile education, may not have any education. But in order for convenient education to produce quality learning, instructors must organize and structure the mobile and online presentation of educational content methodically and carefully. In a brick-and-mortar classroom, where course instruction occurs in a set place and time period, the regularity of place and time provide structure. With mobile and remote education, it is in the interest of both instructors and students for instructors to determine precisely when students will engage with educational content. Structuring the availability of learning information structures the educational experience. Structure can be created in a number of ways with technology: by date and time control mechanisms built into e-learning systems, with specialized client-side soft- ware, as well as with server-side controls on the computers storing the instructional data. With remote instruction, the technological framework is responsible for the
success of the pedagogy.
Social Media: Expanding Pedagogic Opportunities in Film and Television Produc...Samuel Edsall
Social media has changed the way television and films can be produced. Producers in New York can interactively discuss scripts, storyboards and rough cuts with their contacts in Los Angeles via on-line or via mobile devices and applications. The implications for integrating mobile media technology into higher education curricula and pedagogic methodology are equally transformative. For faculty teaching film and video production, mobile media can provide students with access to an infinite number of resources that exponentially expand what can be taught, how it can be conveyed, and where learning can take place.
At the University of Cincinnati a group of thirty-three students from four academic programs in three different colleges utilized a variety of social media technologies to experience an interdisciplinary class that was "team-taught" by both their UC Professor and professionals from the film and TV industry in LA and NY. Their work resulted in the 2012 Gold Rush Expedition Race documentary, an hour-long film that will air this March on a national cable television channel.
Mobile Technologies as Course Research Tools - BEA 2014 Presentation by Dr. D...Samuel Edsall
This presentation details the use of mobile technologies, such as smart phones and tablets, as important instructional research components in a global social media course. Examples will be provided relating to the research procedures, mobile technology implementation and designed academic activities that illustrate beneficial and enhanced student learning.
Epistemic Interaction - tuning interfaces to provide information for AI supportAlan Dix
Paper presented at SYNERGY workshop at AVI 2024, Genoa, Italy. 3rd June 2024
https://alandix.com/academic/papers/synergy2024-epistemic/
As machine learning integrates deeper into human-computer interactions, the concept of epistemic interaction emerges, aiming to refine these interactions to enhance system adaptability. This approach encourages minor, intentional adjustments in user behaviour to enrich the data available for system learning. This paper introduces epistemic interaction within the context of human-system communication, illustrating how deliberate interaction design can improve system understanding and adaptation. Through concrete examples, we demonstrate the potential of epistemic interaction to significantly advance human-computer interaction by leveraging intuitive human communication strategies to inform system design and functionality, offering a novel pathway for enriching user-system engagements.
Elevating Tactical DDD Patterns Through Object CalisthenicsDorra BARTAGUIZ
After immersing yourself in the blue book and its red counterpart, attending DDD-focused conferences, and applying tactical patterns, you're left with a crucial question: How do I ensure my design is effective? Tactical patterns within Domain-Driven Design (DDD) serve as guiding principles for creating clear and manageable domain models. However, achieving success with these patterns requires additional guidance. Interestingly, we've observed that a set of constraints initially designed for training purposes remarkably aligns with effective pattern implementation, offering a more ‘mechanical’ approach. Let's explore together how Object Calisthenics can elevate the design of your tactical DDD patterns, offering concrete help for those venturing into DDD for the first time!
Connector Corner: Automate dynamic content and events by pushing a buttonDianaGray10
Here is something new! In our next Connector Corner webinar, we will demonstrate how you can use a single workflow to:
Create a campaign using Mailchimp with merge tags/fields
Send an interactive Slack channel message (using buttons)
Have the message received by managers and peers along with a test email for review
But there’s more:
In a second workflow supporting the same use case, you’ll see:
Your campaign sent to target colleagues for approval
If the “Approve” button is clicked, a Jira/Zendesk ticket is created for the marketing design team
But—if the “Reject” button is pushed, colleagues will be alerted via Slack message
Join us to learn more about this new, human-in-the-loop capability, brought to you by Integration Service connectors.
And...
Speakers:
Akshay Agnihotri, Product Manager
Charlie Greenberg, Host
Essentials of Automations: Optimizing FME Workflows with ParametersSafe Software
Are you looking to streamline your workflows and boost your projects’ efficiency? Do you find yourself searching for ways to add flexibility and control over your FME workflows? If so, you’re in the right place.
Join us for an insightful dive into the world of FME parameters, a critical element in optimizing workflow efficiency. This webinar marks the beginning of our three-part “Essentials of Automation” series. This first webinar is designed to equip you with the knowledge and skills to utilize parameters effectively: enhancing the flexibility, maintainability, and user control of your FME projects.
Here’s what you’ll gain:
- Essentials of FME Parameters: Understand the pivotal role of parameters, including Reader/Writer, Transformer, User, and FME Flow categories. Discover how they are the key to unlocking automation and optimization within your workflows.
- Practical Applications in FME Form: Delve into key user parameter types including choice, connections, and file URLs. Allow users to control how a workflow runs, making your workflows more reusable. Learn to import values and deliver the best user experience for your workflows while enhancing accuracy.
- Optimization Strategies in FME Flow: Explore the creation and strategic deployment of parameters in FME Flow, including the use of deployment and geometry parameters, to maximize workflow efficiency.
- Pro Tips for Success: Gain insights on parameterizing connections and leveraging new features like Conditional Visibility for clarity and simplicity.
We’ll wrap up with a glimpse into future webinars, followed by a Q&A session to address your specific questions surrounding this topic.
Don’t miss this opportunity to elevate your FME expertise and drive your projects to new heights of efficiency.
Transcript: Selling digital books in 2024: Insights from industry leaders - T...BookNet Canada
The publishing industry has been selling digital audiobooks and ebooks for over a decade and has found its groove. What’s changed? What has stayed the same? Where do we go from here? Join a group of leading sales peers from across the industry for a conversation about the lessons learned since the popularization of digital books, best practices, digital book supply chain management, and more.
Link to video recording: https://bnctechforum.ca/sessions/selling-digital-books-in-2024-insights-from-industry-leaders/
Presented by BookNet Canada on May 28, 2024, with support from the Department of Canadian Heritage.
Builder.ai Founder Sachin Dev Duggal's Strategic Approach to Create an Innova...Ramesh Iyer
In today's fast-changing business world, Companies that adapt and embrace new ideas often need help to keep up with the competition. However, fostering a culture of innovation takes much work. It takes vision, leadership and willingness to take risks in the right proportion. Sachin Dev Duggal, co-founder of Builder.ai, has perfected the art of this balance, creating a company culture where creativity and growth are nurtured at each stage.
Accelerate your Kubernetes clusters with Varnish CachingThijs Feryn
A presentation about the usage and availability of Varnish on Kubernetes. This talk explores the capabilities of Varnish caching and shows how to use the Varnish Helm chart to deploy it to Kubernetes.
This presentation was delivered at K8SUG Singapore. See https://feryn.eu/presentations/accelerate-your-kubernetes-clusters-with-varnish-caching-k8sug-singapore-28-2024 for more details.
GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using Deplo...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
FIDO Alliance Osaka Seminar: Passkeys at Amazon.pdf
Final Cut Pro X Lesson 3
1. Lesson 3:
Organizing Clips into an
Event
Apple Pro Training
Series
Final Cut Pro X
Instructor: Sam Edsall
2. Event Management
Getting things organized
• Manually assigning keywords
• Rating clips
• Creating Smart Collections
The Goal
• To arrange and combine the Event clips so you
can easily find them.
• Done by using the Event Library and Event
Browser to organize, sort, filter, and find your
media.
3. Metadata
Data about data
• Provides information about your content
• Content, title, length, format, creator, etc.
• Tells you something about the clip without looking at it
How FCP uses Metadata
• Automatically logged during import
• Like in lesson 2
• Tagging keywords to clips metadata
• Rating clips with a thumbs up and thumbs down
metadata
• Final Cut Pro uses the metadata to organize your content
into a structure that is easy to sort, filter, search, and
retrieve.
4. 3 Types of Metadata
Camera Metadata
• Stored in the camera source files
• Date, clip duration, timecode, frame rate and size
Final Cut Pro metadata
• Clips analyzed from media source files by FCP
• People and shot detection
• Video & audio problems – stability, hum, etc.
User metadata
• Done by you
• Keywords, ratings, Smart Collections
• Personalized clip organization for a faster and easier workflow.
5. Load up the Event
Start up the APTS External
Drive.
In the Event Library, select
the Mobileviz Minutes
Event from APTS FCP X.
Beneath the Event Library,
click the List View button to
view the clips as a list.
6. Event View Settings
Set the Event Browser filter
at the upper left is set to All
Clips.
Also choose Group Clips By
>None
7. Clip Metadata in List
View
Data about your data
• Clip metadata under each
column heading
• Name, start and end
timecode, duration, creation
date
• Metadata came from the
original camera files
• You can add your own
metadata in the Notes
column and display
additional columns
8. Event, Keywords,
Smart Collections
In the Event Library, click the
disclosure triangles next to the I
Thinkand Zero to HeroEvents.
Open the I Think > People folder, to
see the clip collections listed within
those folders.
9. Color Coding
Event
• White-starred, purple icon
Smart Collections
• Purple with a purple gear icon
Keyword Collections
• Blue with a blue key
10. Event, Keywords,
Smart Collections
Under the I ThinkEvent,
select the One PersonSmart
Collection.
To see these clips in filmstrip
view, click the Filmstrip View
button.
11. Clip Coding
The Purple Line
• Purple horizontal line
across the top indicates an
analysis keyword
• „Find People‟ and „Create
Smart Collection‟ was
selected in the Import
dialog box
• FCP automatically
collected the clips with one
person and placed them in
the One Person Smart
Collection.
12. Event, Keywords,
Smart Collections
In the Event Library under
the Zero to HeroEvent,
click the Interviews
Keyword Collection.
13. Clip Coding
The Blue Line
• Blue horizontal line
across the top indicates
a key word collection
• This text-based
Keyword Collection is
named after the
Interviews folder you
imported in lesson 2.
14. Resizing the Event
Browser
Place your pointer over the boundary line between the
Event Browser and the Viewer.
When it changes to the resize pointer, drag right to enlarge
the Event Browser.
15. Resizing the Event
Browser
In the Event Library, select the Mobileviz MinutesEvent.
Drag the Clip Duration slider to All to view individual thumbnail images.
Under Clip Appearance deselect Show Waveforms.
Adjust the Clip Height slider until you see all the clips in this Event.
16. Adding Keyword
Collections
A Keyword
Collection
• Descriptive text label
you apply to a clip.
• Adding keywords helps
you organize, sort, and
finding your media
• Helps speed up your
editing workflow
17. Creating Keyword
Collections
In the Event Library, select
the Mobileviz
MinutesEvent, and then
click the List View button.
In the Event Browser, click
the __Kevin_1 clip.
18. Creating Keyword
Collections
Hide the waveforms by
choosing View > Hide
Waveforms.
Resize the filmstrip area by
vertically dragging the
boundary between the
filmstrip and the list (above
the column headings).
19. Creating Keyword
Collections
In the Event Browser, click
the Keyword Editor button.
-- or press Command-K.
The Keyword Editor opens
with the name of the
selected clip, __Kevin_1,
displayed in the name area
of the window.
-- any information entered in the
Keyword field will be added to
this clip.
20. Creating Keyword
Collections
In the Keyword field, type
Kevin
Watch the_Kevin_1_clip
filmstrip as you press
Return.
-- the keyword you entered floats
up into a blue horizontal line that
is added to the filmstrip.
21. Keyword Collection
Icons
Event Library
• New blue Keyword
collection under the
Event
Event Browser
• Blue line on clip
• Keyword collection
key under the clip in
the list view
22. Add More Clips to Your
Collection
Select the __Kevin_2_
clip.
Open the Keyword Editor
and click on the Control 1
icon next to „Kevin‟.
-- watch the filmstrip as the
keyword floats into the
__Kevin_2_ clip‟s new blue
keyword line.
23. Add More Clips to Your
Collection
Drag em‟:
Scroll through the Event
Browser, find the eight clips with
filenames that begin with
mocap.
Select all eight mocap clips
-- Select the mocaphookup
-- Shift-click the mocap strap
stilts clip
Drag the group onto the Kevin
Keyword Collection.
24. Removing a Keyword
from a Clip
Oops
• Sometimes you have
a clip in a collection
that doesn‟t belong
there
„Un-Keyword‟ it
• Select the clip with
the wrong keyword
and press Control 0
25. Remove a Clip From Your
Collection
Select the Mobileviz Minutes
Event.
Select the mocap sensor rail
clip.
In the Keyword Editor, press
Control-0
-- watch the filmstrip as the
keyword turns into a puff of
smoke, and the blue horizontal
line disappears.
26. Assigning Multiple
Keywords to Clips
More is better
• Clips with several
keywords make it
easier to find.
• As you tag clips with
additional keywords,
they will find their ways
into more Keyword
Collections.
27. Adding Multiple
Keywords to Clips
Select the Mobileviz
Minutes Event.
Click the Filmstrip View
button, and then drag the
Clip Duration slider to All.
Scroll to find the seven
mocap clips (with blue
keyword lines) you already
tagged if necessary.
28. Adding Multiple
Keywords to Clips
Select the trailer cu clip,
and then Shift-click the
trailer wsclip.
In the Keyword Editor
window, type Trailer in the
Keyword field, and press
Return.
29. Adding Multiple
Keywords to Clips
In the Event Browser,
Command-click all clips
except:
trailer int action
trailer int colorist
trailer int logo so they
remain selected.
In the Name field of the
Keyword Editor next to the
word Trailer, type Interior,
and press Return.
30. Assigning Multiple
Keywords to Clips
Speed Keys
• Create a bunch of
keywords you know
you will need
• Then select the clips
that need a keyword
and assign them
• Drag them over the
keyword in the Event
Library
• Click on the button
• Keyboard shortcut
31. Speed Keywording
In the Keyword Editor, enter
these keywords into the
keyword shortcut fields.
Press Tab after each keyword
entry to move to the next
field.
Control-4: Interviews
Control-5: Actress
Control-6: Alex
Control-7: Mocap
Control-8: Robot
Control-9: On Set
32. Speed Keywording
In the Event Browser,
select the _Alex clip, and
then Shift-click the
_Sergei_2 clip.
Assign the Interviews
keyword to all of these
clips
-- click the Keyword Shortcut
button (^4)
-- press Control-4 on your
keyboard
33. Dump a Keyword
Collection
Lose it
• Control-click (or 2-
finger click) the
offending keyword
collection in the
Event Library
• Select “Delete
Keyword Collection”
in the shortcut menu
34. Dump a Keyword
Collection
To delete the Keyword
Collection in the Event
Library, Control-click the
Interior keyword collection.
From the shortcut menu,
choose Delete Keyword
Collection
-- you can just press
Command-Delete
35. Speed Keywording
Add an On Set keyword to
the following clips:
Actress leaves car
Alex at monitor
Alex directs copters
Alex green screen
Alex talks framing
arri camera
camera focus
green screen move
James talks mocap
mocap hookup
36. Speed Keywording
Select the Interviews
keyword collection, then
select the _Alex clip and
assign the Alex keyword to
that clip.
Select the Mobile vis
Event, select all the clips
with „Alex‟ in the name of
the clip and drag to the
Alex keyword in the Event
Browser.
37. Applying a Keyword to
Part of your Clip
Mark a Part
• You may find a few
great seconds tucked
into the middle of an
otherwise uneventful
shot.
• In Final Cut Pro, you
can identify a range of
material within a clip,
and then apply a
keyword to that range.
38. Applying a Keyword to
Part of your Clip
In the Event Library, select the Mobileviz MinutesEvent.
Click the List View button, and then select the arri camera
clip.
39. Applying a Keyword to
Part of your Clip
Add some new Keywords:
In the Keyword Editor,
select Kevin in the first
keyword shortcut field.
Type Camera, and press
Return.
Click in the second
shortcut field, type Pre-
Selects, and press Return.
40. Applying a Keyword to
Part of your Clip
In the arri camera clip, skim to the point early in the clip
around 00:00:38:15
-- camera zoomed in on the camera operator attaching
mocap gear on camera.
Press I to mark a Start point.
41. Applying a Keyword to
Part of your Clip
Skim the clip to the point where the checkerboard fills at
least half of the frame at about 00:00:43:00.
Press O to mark an End point.
42. Changing Start and End
Points in Event Browser
Change your
Marks
• Once you have
selected a range
within a clip, it‟s
easy to change your
Start and End points
• Skim to new
location and press I
or O again
• Drag the edge of
your selection
43. Change your Selection
In the arri camera filmstrip, position your pointer over the
End point of the range selection, and drag right.
In the Viewer, watch as the checkerboard edge clears the
frame at about 00:00:44:00, and release the mouse button.
44. Applying a Keyword to
Part of your Clip
In the Keyword Editor, click the first shortcut button to add
the Camera keyword to the clip.
Then click the second shortcut button to add the Pre-
Selects keyword to the clip.
45. Applying a Keyword to
Part of your Clip
Check it out:
Select the Camera keyword
collection in the Event
Library and play the arri
camera clip.
-- see how only part of the entire
clip is kept here
46. Rating, Sorting &
Searching Clips
Thumbs Up /
Down
• Use a rating system
to narrow down your
content into usable
or unusable
categories
• Good clips or ranges
of clips marked as a
Favorite
• Bad stuff marked as
Rejected
47. Rating, Sorting &
Searching Clips
Who has or doesn‟t have a
keyword?
Select the Mobileviz
Minutes Event, and click the
List View button.
In the Event Browser, click
the Filter pop-up menu and
choose No Ratings or
Keywords
48. Selecting a Range as a
Favorite
Skim the actress leaves car clip and notice the
swish pans at the start and end of the clip.
-- we want to bypass the bad pans and mark the good stuff
in the middle.
This clip actually
was assigned a
keyword, so you
need to select „All
Clips‟
49. Selecting a Range as a
Favorite
Skim to where the camera
first settles on the actress, at
around 00:00:12:11.
Drag the mouse to the right
to around 00:00:15:19, just
before the second swish pan
begins, and then release the
mouse button.
-- you can also press I and O to
set start and end points
50. Selecting a Range as a
Favorite
To rate this range or
selection as a Favorite, in
the toolbar, click the green-
starred Favorite button, or
press F.
From the Filter pop-up,
choose Favorites.
Skim through the actress
leaves car clip to see if you
only have the good part of
the clip.
51. Rejecting
FAIL!
• Mark a clip or a
range as rejected
• Works like the
Favorite except now
you rejecting and
hiding content you
don‟t intend to use
52. Sorting
From the Filter pop-up
menu, choose All Clips.
In the search field, enter
green.
-- only those clips that have
green in their names or notes will
appear in the list.
53. Rejecting
Skim through the green
screen move clip and note
the bobbled pan at the start
of the clip.
-- we want to mark that part of
the clip as no good.
54. Rejecting
Drag from the beginning of
the clip to the right and
release the mouse button
when the camera settles on
the silver truck.
In the toolbar, click the red
Reject (X) button, or press
Delete.
55. Hiding Rejected Content
From the Filter pop-up
menu, choose Hide
Rejected
Select the green screen
move clip and press the
forward slash key (/) to play
it.
-- with the rejected portion
hidden, this clip now begins with
the silver truck.
56. Adding Notes to Clips
Little Reminders
• Note the content of an interview
• An idea about how to use a clip in your project
• Attach the portion of voice-over text to the clip or
clips you are considering using at that location
• Include lyric lines in clips for music video
• Perform a text search to instantly bring up these
clips when you are ready to implement your ideas
57. Adding Notes to Clips
From the Filter pop-up
menu, choose All Clips.
In the search field, click the
Reset button (X) to clear
the field contents.
Select the _Ari clip and
play just the end of this clip.
-- he says „cool concept‟
-- that‟s a good label for this
sound bite
58. Add a Note to a Range
of a Clip
Create a range in the _Ari
clip that includes all of his
statement,
“Having that on
wheels...cool concept.”
Mark this range as a
Favorite.
59. Add a Note to a Range
of a Clip
In the Event Browser,
below the clip filmstrip,
scroll all the way to the right
to bring the Notes column
into view.
Drag the Note column
heading to the left and drop
it so it is next to the Name
column.
60. Add a Note to a Range
of a Clip
Select the Favorite that you
created in the _Ari clip, and
then click in the Note
column field.
When the field becomes
active, enter cool concept,
and press Return.
61. Add a Note to a Range
of a Clip
Test it out:
In the Event Browser
search field, enter cool
concept.
-- only the _Ari clip appears in
the list.
Click on the X to clear the
search field.
62. Creating Smart
Collections
Save your
searches
• Search for clips in an
Event using the Filter
window
• Save your search
results as a Smart
Collection.
• Smart Collections
update dynamically
when a new clip
matches the Smart
Collection search
criteria
63. Prep for a Smart
Collection
Click the Mobileviz
Minutes Event.
From the Filter pop-up
menu, choose All Clips.
If necessary, clear the
search field.
64. Prep for a Smart
Collection
In the Event Browser, click
the magnifying glass icon
to open the Filter window.
Easy shortcut – Command
F – as in „find‟
65. The Filter Window
How it works
• You can use the
results of the search to
create a Smart
Collection based on
your chosen criteria
• You can search by
text, keyword, type of
media, format, and so
on.
66. Make a Smart Collection
Next to the Text field,
deselect the checkbox to
remove Text as criteria for
this search.
Click the Add Rule (+) pop-
up menu in the upper-right
corner.
From the pop-up menu,
choose Keywords
67. Make a Smart Collection
Within the Keyword filter
rule, deselect all Keyword
Collections except Kevin,
On Set, and Camera.
Click the New Smart
Collection button.
68. Make a Smart Collection
In the Event Library, a new
purple-geared Smart
Collection appears named
Untitled.
Highlight the new Smart
Collection and name it
MocapEdit, and press
Return.
69. Modifying a Smart
Collection
Add or Remove
Stuff
• Open the Smart
Collection in the
Event Library
• Use the Filter
window to add or
remove parameters
• Clips will update as
you make the
changes
70. Modify a Smart
Collection
In the Event Library,
double-click
the_MocapEdit_SmartColle
ction.
In the Filter window, select
the Text filter checkbox,
and in the Text field enter
James.
-- right now, no clips appear in
the Event Browser – hang on!
71. Little Button
Big Difference
All / Any Pop-up
• Decides how to search for clips
All
• Only clips that meet all the
filter parameters will be
included
Any
• Any clip that meets any of the
filter parameters will be
included
72. Modify a Smart
Collection
In the Filter window, from
the Filter pop-up menu,
choose Any
Now all the James and
Kevin clips appear
together, including the
_James interview clip.
73. Shortcuts
Command A • Selects all clips
Command F • Show the Filter window
Command K • Show/Hide Keyword Collection
Command Shift K • Create a new Keyword Collection
Command Delete • Move the selection to the trash
74. Shortcuts
I • Set the start point for a selection
O • Set the end point for a selection
• Move the playhead to the previous
frame
• Move the playhead to the next frame
Slash / • Play the selection
75. Homework Assignment
1. Complete this lesson so you have
all the Keyword Collections and
the Smart Collection in the
Mobilevis Minutes event.
2. Select the Mocap Edit Smart
collection
3. Change the view of Event Browser
to filmstrip
4. Set the duration to All so each clip
is one frame long
5. Adjust the clip height and size of
the Event Browser so all the clips
in the Smart Collection can be
seen.
76. Homework Assignment
6. Using the Grab application,
select the area of your Event
Library and Event Browser so
all the clips in the Mocap Edit
Smart Collection can be seen.
7. Save the image. Email me on
Western Online with the image
as an attachment.