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Adobe Audition CS6 Training Chapter 10: Video 3

Adobe Audition CS6 Training Chapter 10: Video 2

Adobe Audition CS6 Training Chapter 10: Video 1

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Final Cut Pro X Training Chapter 11: In this video, you will learn:
Export an XML File

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Final Cut Pro X Training Chapter 11: In this video, you will learn:
Export a Still Image

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Final Cut Pro X Training Chapter 11: In this video, you will learn:
Export Media Using Roles

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Final Cut Pro X Training Chapter 11: In this video, you will learn:
Show how to export a high-quality master file of a project
Explain various export options
Provide recommendations for the best export

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Final Cut Pro X Training Chapter 11: In this video, you will learn:
Show how to publish a file to YouTube
Illustrate other web-publishing options

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Final Cut Pro X Training Chapter 11: In this video, you will learn:
Media Browser

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Final Cut Pro X Training Chapter 11: In this video, you will learn:
Explain Share
Show the Share Inspector
Illustrate icons that show if a project is shared or changed
Show how to use the Share Monitor

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Final Cut Pro X Training Chapter 11 This chapter shows how sharing is the process of delivering your projects to the world. Export create a file of your project on your hard disk. Share exports a project, compresses it, and publishes it to the website or device of your choice. This chapter covers both methods.

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One of the questions we get asked frequently is how to create a standard-definition DVD when you are working with high-definition video.

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Telling great stories visually is wonderful. But what do you do with all the pieces when you are done?

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A while back, we presented a webinar — Improve Your Audio Using Soundtrack Pro — introducing the power that Soundtrack Pro brings to your audio. This session picks up where that session left off.

The alpha channel determines the transparency of each pixel in a clip; it is similar to the red, green, and blue channels that determine color.

Have you ever played a QuickTime movie and wondered why it didn’t look like it was in the right aspect ratio or why the image looked soft?

Creating great-looking freeze frames from Final Cut is difficult because exported video images look stretched, often with thin horizontal lines radiating out from moving images.

How do you convert your movie into H.264 from either Final Cut Pro or QuickTime?

This training is designed for folks that want to compress their media faster using the automation tools built into Compressor. If your deadlines are shrinking, clients are demanding higher quality with lower budgets, and you need to get work done faster, this session is for you.

This session is designed for folks that are new to working with tapeless media. As our example for this training, we will be working with AVCHD media.

In this one-hour video tutorial, Larry Jordan shows you what you need to know to work successfully in a tapeless world.

Video compression is required when posting video projects to the web. In this Compressor tutorial, you will learn common video compression terms, how to diagnose and fix compression problems, how to export from Final Cut Pro with the best quality, how to optimize web video, how to create files for YouTube or other services, and how to improve the look of your video when compressing for DVD.

This session is the third in our Compression Complete series and provides specific examples of how to transcode media using both Apple Final Cut Pro and Compressor; including working with DSLR media.

This session provides theories, suggestions, and examples on how to improve video images quality. It does not discuss specific cameras, video formats, or equipment.

In this session, host Larry Jordan explains why it’s hard to make still images look good, shows how to prep your images for video, illustrates how to size your images properly, and shows how to create moves on stills using Apple’s Final Cut Pro and GeeThree’s PhotoMotion. Plus, this provides extensive tables illustrating how to properly size stills.

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