MacroSystem Digital Video HDV-Recorder Manual de usuario Pagina 36

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36
Chapter 4
Rest: The field Rem. shows you how much time remains,
meaning how much video can still be recorded. This amount is
an estimate. This is especially the case for longer recordings or
for HD footage, because the system calculates the remaining
time on the basis of the level of detail of the footage already
recorded. The value is not recalculated until the current record-
ing is finished. If the quality settings change, the actual space
may be slightly more or less than this estimate.
Just like the video settings, this menu is superimposed
over the video. You can see the video during recording
and thus always decide whether you want to digitize a se-
quence or not. The symbol at the bottom left with the two
triangles moves the panel to the top edge of the screen. This is
useful if the panel happens to be covering important parts of
your material.
You can use the button above it to reduce the menu to a
much smaller bar, in case too much of your video image has
been covered. Then the only buttons available is the button
described above and the button (Recording menu symbol) to
restore the entire menu.
’DV control’ is done with these
five buttons. You can directly
control the connected DV device through the i-Link interface.
You should be aware that most devices are compatible, but
some are not. If this is the case, the DV/HDV device can be
started manually and should then input correctly. Seen from
left to right, the buttons are used to: stop the recorder, play,
pause, rewind, and fast forward. Rewind and fast forward have
three different effects. Fast rewind and fast forward are
achieved while the DV source is in stop mode, viewable slow
rewind and slow forward in play back mode, and frame-by-
frame backward and forward in pause mode.
The four menu symbols bring you
directly to the Edit, Record/Edit, Video
settings, and to the Main menu screens.
4.7 Editing
This screen is used for most of your editing work, and for se-
quencing of trimmed scenes. This is the most important menu.
The view of the scene bin can also be modified or defined in
the menu under Settings-Storyboard, Timeline.
The menu can be displayed in different ways. The display de-
pends on the screen resolution and also depends on whether
you are using the Timeline or the Storyboard modes. Resolu-
tions higher than 1024x768 pixels (1280x720 for a 16:9 project)
will result in a slightly different edit bin screen section. All but-
tons described here are present in both view types.
(1) The Storyboard is displayed in the top third of the Edit
menu. This is a tool that has been used since movies were
invented. The idea is to clearly lay out all the scenes of a pro-
duction in order to more easily implement editing principles. A
single frame, (the first pictures of a scene), are used as sym-
bols (‘thumbnails’) to represent the scene. A glimpse at the
storyboard allows you to grasp the whole story without having
to review all of the material. Traditionally, the storyboard was
a large board composed of hand-drawn pictures. Your system
uses an electronic storyboard.
Scenes are selected from the scene bin and put into order on
the storyboard, located in the upper section of the screen. In
the storyboard the selected scene is in the center. The se-
lected scene length (duration) is displayed above the scene
to highlight it. If you insert a new scene in the storyboard, it
will be inserted just after the current scene. If there is only one
scene in the storyboard, however, you will, only in this case, be
able to determine whether the next scene must be inserted in
front of or after this scene. Clicking on a scene in the story-
board causes it to be moved to the center (often referred to
as the ‘selected’ or ‘active’ scene). Depending on the chosen
resolution (see chapter 5: VGA mode), at least seven complete
scenes will fit into a visible part of the Storyboard. But there is
no limit to the number of scenes that may actually be present
on the storyboard. The storyboard can be scrolled to the left
or right. The starting point is to the left, and scenes are played
sequentially from left to right.
To scroll up or down in the scene bin, you can use the scroll-
bar on the right or the arrow button below. It is even faster
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