Version: 2008

Comments on: YouTube directors ready for postproduction

Companies that make editing software and digital cameras are trying to cash in on video-sharing craze.
Images: Tools for directors

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Would any videographer put up with terrible quality at YouTube?
by LilyR August 30, 2006 4:43 AM PDT
Its true that its becoming easier and easier to get to grips with software that can add immense depth to the quality of your video and really start to generate something good to watch, but it is as soon as you start to do this that you realise that YouTube just is NOT the place to show them. The quality is diabolical, and most of the other sites you mention are no better.

There's no point adding jaw-dropping effects to you videos and then delivering pixelated rubbish. What we need is a quality service that really lets people enjoy what has been created, not dumb it down to a lowest common denominator flash skit. Anyone else feel this way?
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The way it goes.
by skeptik August 30, 2006 9:26 AM PDT
So the tools are catching up to the medium, and now you're complaining that the medium doesn't live up to the results of the tools. Such is the nature of things. Continual progress, with the weak link moving from one step to the next as each improves.
Vegas Video
by Vaasman August 30, 2006 9:25 AM PDT
I use Vegas as my video editor. I have tried several, most are buggy and crash a lot. I recommend that anyone who wants to edit should start with the Vegas and DVD production suite. You can by a limited home version for less than $90. The full up version costs over $600.
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vegas
by garrywdm August 30, 2006 7:54 PM PDT
I love sony's Vegas, rock solid, intuitive to use, and more bells and whistles than you would ever use. I've used Avid, Media100, Final Cut Pro as a professional editor in TV+doc production for years, they offer nothing that you can't do with ease on Vegas. It's simply the next brilliant phase of digital image evolution. *two thumbs up*
GET Vegas Home PLATINUM for HD
by disco-legend-zeke September 1, 2006 5:15 AM PDT
The latest release of the Home version of sony vegas platinum is $129 List Price.

The platinum includes tools for importing HDV.

I have been using vegas to extract stills for my websites.

Prior to getting vegas, i struggled with Adobe Premire for 10 years and never really got the hang of it (its written in FILM editor terms.)

VEGAS, on the other hand is written around VIDEO editing procedures.

At first glance, they seem the same, but it was a world of difference for me!
Heads-up: Adorage Link Correction
by Deacon Blues August 30, 2006 10:58 AM PDT
Dude, it's adorage.DE, not .COM! Or prodad.de.
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viva vegas
by garrywdm August 30, 2006 7:58 PM PDT
I love sony's Vegas, rock solid, intuitive to use, and more bells and whistles than you would ever use. I've used Avid, Media100, Final Cut Pro as a professional editor in TV+doc production for years, they offer nothing that you can't do with ease on Vegas. It's simply the next brilliant phase of digital image evolution. *two thumbs up*
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simple editing tools
by irfon September 1, 2006 6:29 AM PDT
i makes sense to use simple tools, just look at my.sportal.com
simple edit and mash up for free!
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