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Editing Video
When it comes to editing video there's an overwhelming choice of applications to choose from. If you want to keep it simple - and don't mind basic features with limited export functionality (and you're on a Windows PC of course!) - then we'd recommend Windows Movie Maker. However - if you want more functionality (including the ability to export in a range of formats) we'd recommend something more powerful like:
Pinnacle Studio | Ulead Video Studio | AVS Video Editor
We've put together a series of guides to help you edit video using AVS Video Editor. The screencast videos contain walk-through demonstrations with voice-over narration. Although we've used AVS in these demonstrations - the basic principals are similar for many video editing applications.
The Video Toolkit
- By Daniel O'Brien
- Published 08/6/2007
- Editing Video
Editing video in education is not just about using fancy transitions and film-like effects, it's about creating quality learning material that achieves a certain objective. Educators often need to include screenshots, diagrams - even powerpoint slides in their video content. To help achieve this we put together a "Video Toolkit" containing relevant software that may be needed.
View Screencast Video
AVS Video Editor - Creating a New Project
- By Daniel O'Brien
- Published 08/7/2007
- Editing Video
Creation of a new project is the first thing you do when you start working with AVS Audio Editor. A project is the best way to arrange the sequence, timing, position, and information about video clips, image files you have added to the storyboard (timeline), audio tracks and also the history of applied effects and changes. AVS Video Editor project file has a .vep file extension. Working with projects rather than with single files allows you to avoid recompression and quality loss. Having saved a project you can open it later and start editing from where you last saved.
