Q. When i watch a video at the end it show 2 clips of previus and newer video
but when the video is first uploaded it only shows tge previus video but not the new one because it has not been made yet but say next week that new video comes out then that clip is added to other video that did not have new video....im guesing they use youtube editer to add in that clip but.....they do not take it down tyen add the clip then render then repubpishesh on youtube how do u add the clip with youtube editor
but when the video is first uploaded it only shows tge previus video but not the new one because it has not been made yet but say next week that new video comes out then that clip is added to other video that did not have new video....im guesing they use youtube editer to add in that clip but.....they do not take it down tyen add the clip then render then repubpishesh on youtube how do u add the clip with youtube editor
Answer
It's all about the Video Editing Program they use to edit their Videos and The person doing the Editing has lots of Hard Drive Space Available on that editing Computer..
YouTube editor, no These 2 Programs below can do that easily. So go get about 4 to 10 TB hard drive space, the talent needed to make videos like these and You to could make the same thing.
Pinnacle Studio 14 HD Ultimate & Sony Vegas Pro 10
Screen Shot, Top Picture - http://asimplelife.ca/nle.html Upgrade your computer to AVCHD specs below and you can run both programs seen on my Web Page on your computer. Just Rejig the search term below in the YouTube search, from the instructions below.
This is not a program that can run on any computer, see below -
Minimum System Requirements
Windows® 7, Windows Vista® (SP2), or Windows XP (SP3)
Intel® Pentium® or AMD Athlon⢠1.8 GHz (2.4 GHz or higher recommended)
-Intel Core⢠2 Duo 2.4 GHz required for AVCHD*
-Intel Core⢠2 Quad 2.66 GHz or Intel Core i7 required for
AVCHD* 1920
1 GB system memory recommended, 2 GB required for AVCHD*
DirectX® 9 or 10 compatible graphics card with 64 MB (128 MB or higher recommended)
-256 MB required for HD and AVCHD*
DirectX 9 (or higher) compatible sound card
3.8 GB of disk space
DVD-ROM drive to install software
Import Formats
â¢Video: AVCHD*, AVCHD Lite*, BD Blu-ray*, DV, HDV, AVI, MPEG-1, MPEG-2, DivX®*, MPEG-4*, 3GP (MPEG-4)*, WMV, non-encrypted DVD titles (incl. DVD-VR/+VR), QuickTime® MOV (DV, MPEG-4*, H.264*), DivX Plus® MKV*
â¢Audio: MP3, MPA, WAV, AC3*, WMA
â¢Graphic: BMP, GIF, JPG, PCX, PSD, TGA, TIF, WMF, PNG, J2K
If interested, link below takes you to the site, but you can get this $80 program for free. Do this by opening a web browser, surfing over to YouTube. Once there, in the search box on that site, enter 'Pinnacle Studio 14' or âSony Vegas Pro 10â. Youâre looking for free download, find a link or video that says that, in the video description, there will be link for a free download. Make sure, before you do this, to make sure your computer can meet or exceed those Specs above, and pay special attention to the AVCHD specs if you have or are going to get a HD camcorder.
http://www.videomaker.com/article/14635 Pinnacle Studio 14 Ultimate Collection
http://www.videomaker.com/article/15120 Sony Vegas Pro 10
It's all about the Video Editing Program they use to edit their Videos and The person doing the Editing has lots of Hard Drive Space Available on that editing Computer..
YouTube editor, no These 2 Programs below can do that easily. So go get about 4 to 10 TB hard drive space, the talent needed to make videos like these and You to could make the same thing.
Pinnacle Studio 14 HD Ultimate & Sony Vegas Pro 10
Screen Shot, Top Picture - http://asimplelife.ca/nle.html Upgrade your computer to AVCHD specs below and you can run both programs seen on my Web Page on your computer. Just Rejig the search term below in the YouTube search, from the instructions below.
This is not a program that can run on any computer, see below -
Minimum System Requirements
Windows® 7, Windows Vista® (SP2), or Windows XP (SP3)
Intel® Pentium® or AMD Athlon⢠1.8 GHz (2.4 GHz or higher recommended)
-Intel Core⢠2 Duo 2.4 GHz required for AVCHD*
-Intel Core⢠2 Quad 2.66 GHz or Intel Core i7 required for
AVCHD* 1920
1 GB system memory recommended, 2 GB required for AVCHD*
DirectX® 9 or 10 compatible graphics card with 64 MB (128 MB or higher recommended)
-256 MB required for HD and AVCHD*
DirectX 9 (or higher) compatible sound card
3.8 GB of disk space
DVD-ROM drive to install software
Import Formats
â¢Video: AVCHD*, AVCHD Lite*, BD Blu-ray*, DV, HDV, AVI, MPEG-1, MPEG-2, DivX®*, MPEG-4*, 3GP (MPEG-4)*, WMV, non-encrypted DVD titles (incl. DVD-VR/+VR), QuickTime® MOV (DV, MPEG-4*, H.264*), DivX Plus® MKV*
â¢Audio: MP3, MPA, WAV, AC3*, WMA
â¢Graphic: BMP, GIF, JPG, PCX, PSD, TGA, TIF, WMF, PNG, J2K
If interested, link below takes you to the site, but you can get this $80 program for free. Do this by opening a web browser, surfing over to YouTube. Once there, in the search box on that site, enter 'Pinnacle Studio 14' or âSony Vegas Pro 10â. Youâre looking for free download, find a link or video that says that, in the video description, there will be link for a free download. Make sure, before you do this, to make sure your computer can meet or exceed those Specs above, and pay special attention to the AVCHD specs if you have or are going to get a HD camcorder.
http://www.videomaker.com/article/14635 Pinnacle Studio 14 Ultimate Collection
http://www.videomaker.com/article/15120 Sony Vegas Pro 10
Best (cheap) camcorder for independent films?

Adam
I've been looking at some different cameras for a while, I discovered the Canon HV30 and that seemed to be like a great camera. But my problems are that it records to miniDV and I'd really like a camera that has a built in HDD so I don't have to fool around w/ tapes and putting them on my pc and all that stuff. And also sites have said that the 24p Cinema Mode isn't really 24p... I'm not quite sure what they mean by that but people say that in editing they can do a pulldown or something to make it look the same.. So I'd also like to bypass all of those steps and just have a camera that records straight into 24p (most of my work on this camera will be for films, so this is a must). Does anyone know of any camera that fits into my descriptions that is preferably less than $1000. Thank you.
Answer
For your best quality go for Mini-dv, HDD cameras use high compression and that will reduce the quality, Ok the time it takes to capture the video to your computer is real time 10 Min's, 10 Min's. The video will be compressed too a degree, but in comparison very little, compared to HDD and Media card cameras. Secondly as the data is compressed your computer is going to have to work very hard to process the video, requiring a top spec computer, I was working with 8gb ram and a quad core cpu and my computer was lagging, increasing to 20gb+ especially when you are editing 30 Min's plus video. Unless you have a computer that fits the bill that is going to be another huge expense, probably more than your camcorder.
Cheap does not equate with what you are trying to do, maybe a second hand may fit your bill such as Canon XL2, Not sure if it would be in your price range. but there are companies that supply very good quality S/H camcorders, many will have been checked out and 100%.
many of the "home camcorders" do not consider the user will want more control of the camera, (such as focus) and have auto settings for this and that, and filming is just compromise.
You need to do some reserch into camcorders there are a lot more factors to dertermin the type of camera to get such as what type of video/film are you going to make? Lighting, you need an external mic, many camcorders dont have them, Using other lenses, because one lense does not do all.
I wish you luck
some helpful websites to have alook at are
www.videohelp.com
and
www.mediacollege.com
Good luck
RR
For your best quality go for Mini-dv, HDD cameras use high compression and that will reduce the quality, Ok the time it takes to capture the video to your computer is real time 10 Min's, 10 Min's. The video will be compressed too a degree, but in comparison very little, compared to HDD and Media card cameras. Secondly as the data is compressed your computer is going to have to work very hard to process the video, requiring a top spec computer, I was working with 8gb ram and a quad core cpu and my computer was lagging, increasing to 20gb+ especially when you are editing 30 Min's plus video. Unless you have a computer that fits the bill that is going to be another huge expense, probably more than your camcorder.
Cheap does not equate with what you are trying to do, maybe a second hand may fit your bill such as Canon XL2, Not sure if it would be in your price range. but there are companies that supply very good quality S/H camcorders, many will have been checked out and 100%.
many of the "home camcorders" do not consider the user will want more control of the camera, (such as focus) and have auto settings for this and that, and filming is just compromise.
You need to do some reserch into camcorders there are a lot more factors to dertermin the type of camera to get such as what type of video/film are you going to make? Lighting, you need an external mic, many camcorders dont have them, Using other lenses, because one lense does not do all.
I wish you luck
some helpful websites to have alook at are
www.videohelp.com
and
www.mediacollege.com
Good luck
RR
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