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Hack 90 Tips for Making Videos with Windows Movie Maker


Ways you can make better home movies and other
videos with XP's built-in video maker.

XP is Microsoft's most
media-aware operating system, and it comes with built-in software for
making and editing videos and home movies:
Windows Movie Maker. (To run it, choose Start
All Programs Accessories Windows
Movie Maker.) But making videos properly with it can be tricky, so
check out these tips on how to make better home movies and videos.


10.6.1 Capture the Video Properly


Windows Movie Maker lets you edit
movies and add special effects and titles, but it all starts with
capturing the video properly. So, first make sure that you bring the
video into your PC in the best way.

If you have an analog video camera or
videotape, you need some way of turning those analog signals into
digital data. You can do this via a video capture board or by using a
device you can attach to your FireWire or USB port. If
you're going the route of a video capture board,
make sure the board has XP-certified drivers; otherwise, you may run
into trouble. To find out whether a board has XP-certified drivers,
search the Windows Compatibility List at www.microsoft.com/windows/catalog.

If you have a USB port, you can import analog video with
USB Instant Video or USB InstantDVD,
both available from http://www.adstech.com.
They're hardware/software combinations; to get the
video into your PC, connect the analog video device to the USB
Instant Video or USB InstantDVD device, and then connect a USB cable
from the device to the USB port on your PC. (A similar product,
called the Dazzle Digital Video Creator 150, will do the same thing.
For details, go to http://www.dazzle.com.)

Check your system documentation to see what type of USB port you
have. If you have a USB 1.1 port, you won't be able
to import high-quality video, and you'd be better
off installing a video capture card. USB 2.0 will work fine, though.

If you have a FireWire-enabled PC,
you're also in luck, because its high-speed capacity
is also suitable for importing video. You'll have to
buy extra hardware, called Hollywood DV-Bridge. Plug your RCA
cable or S-Video cable into Hollywood DV-Bridge, and then plug a
FireWire cable from Hollywood DV-Bridge into your FireWire port, and
you'll be able to send video to your PC. For more
information, go to http://www.dazzle.com/products/hw_bridgel.

Once you've set up the hardware and your camera,
recording the video is easy. Open Windows Movie Maker, choose File
Record, start the camera or video, and click Record.


10.6.2 Capturing Video with a Digital Video Camera


If you have a
digital video camera or WebCam, you
shouldn't need any extra hardware in order to
capture video from it, as long as you have a FireWire port on your
PC. These devices generally include built-in FireWire ports (the
cameras might call the port an IEEE 1394 or an i.Link port). If you
don't have a FireWire port on your PC, you can
install a FireWire port card. These generally cost well under $100.
Make sure that the card is OHCI (Open Host Controller
Interface)-compliant.

When you plug your digital camera into a FireWire port and turn it
on, Windows will ask you what you want to do with the camera. Tell it
that you want to Record in Movie Maker, and it will launch Movie
Maker to the Record dialog box, with a video showing in the preview
window.


10.6.3 Best Settings for Recording Video


Before you start recording,
you'll see a preview of your movie in the Record
dialog box, shown in Figure 10-7. This is your
chance to change your video settings, and choosing the proper setting
is perhaps the most important step in creating your video.


Figure 10-7. Options for recording video in Windows Movie Maker


Look at the Setting drop-down box in Figure 10-7.
This box lets you choose the quality of the video
you're creating, which is the most important
setting. These setting will be dependent on the input source; digital
video cameras, for example, let you record at a higher quality than
analog video cameras, so they will give you a wider range of options.
Movie Maker comes with a number of preset
profiles, including three basic ones:
High, Medium, and Low quality. When you make a choice of your
profile, Movie Maker tells you how many hours and minutes of
recording time you have, based on your disk space and the disk
requirements of the profile. For example, you might have 193 hours of
recording time based on the High setting, but 1,630 hours based on
the Low setting.

Those three profiles aren't your only choices,
though. You can choose from a much wider variety of profiles (as a
general rule, I suggest doing that), based on what you plan to do
with the eventual video. Do you plan to post the video on the Web?
Just play it back at home? Run it on a personal digital assistant?
These other profiles are designed for specific purposes like those.

To select the profile, choose Other in the Setting drop-down list.
Underneath it, a new drop-down list appears, shown in Figure 10-8, with a range of profiles from which you can
choose. They're prebuilt for specific usesfor
example, recording video to post on the Web, for color PDA devices,
and for broadband NTSC
(National Television Standards Committee),
which is standard TV.


Figure 10-8. Choosing from additional preset profiles


Whenever you choose a profile, you'll see underneath
it the frame size of the video, the frames per second, and if you choose a
profile from Other, you'll also see the
video bit
rate. Here's what the settings mean:

Video display size



The size of the video, in pixelsfor example, 740 by 480, or
320 by 240.


Frames per second



The number of frames captured per second. For smooth video, you need
30 frames per second, which is the "High
quality" setting. The medium and low quality
settings record at 15 frames per second.


Video bit rate



The bit rate of the recorded videothe higher the bit rate, the
greater the quality.


Audio bit rate and properties



These settings aren't shown in the Windows Movie
settings, but they vary according to which profile you choose. Audio
properties are measured in kilohertz (kHz)the higher the
number, the greater the quality. Audio bit rate measures the bit
rateagain, the higher the bit rate, the greater the quality.



To help you make the best choice among profiles, Table 10-1 shows the settings for every one of the Movie
Maker profiles.

Table 10-1. Settings for Movie Maker profiles

Profile name


Video display size


Video bit rate


Audio properties


Audio bit rate


Video for web servers (28.8 Kbps)


160x120 pixels


20 kilobits per second (Kbps)


8 kilohertz (kHz)


8 Kbps


Video for web servers (56 Kbps)


176x144 pixels


30 Kbps


11 kHz


10 Kbps


Video for single-channel ISDN (64 Kbps)


240x176 pixels


50 Kbps


11 kHz


10 Kbps


Video for email and dual-channel ISDN (128 Kbps)


320x240 pixels


100 Kbps


16 kHz


16 Kbps


Video for broadband NTSC (256 Kbps)


320x240 pixels


225 Kbps


32 kHz


32 Kbps


Video for broadband NTSC (384 Kbps)


320x240 pixels


350 Kbps


32 kHz


32 Kbps


Video for broadband NTSC (768 Kbps)


320x240 pixels


700 Kbps


44 kHz


64 Kbps


Video for broadband NTSC (1500 Kbps total)


640x480 pixels


1,368 Kbps


44 kHz


128 Kbps


Video for broadband NTSC (2 Mbps total)


640x480 pixels


1,868 Kbps


44 kHz


128 Kbps


Video for broadband film content (768 Kbps)


640x480 pixels


568 Kbps


44 kHz


128 Kbps


Video for broadband film content (1500 Kbps total)


640x480 pixels


1,368 Kbps


44 kHz


128 Kbps


Video for color PDA devices (150 Kbps)


208x160 pixels


111 Kbps


22 kHz


32 Kbps


Video for color PDA devices (225 Kbps)


208x160 pixels


186 Kbps


22 kHz


32 Kbps


DV-AVI (25 Mbps)


720x480 pixels (NTSC)

720x525 pixels (PAL)


1,411 Kbps


48 kHz


16 Kbps


10.6.4 Tips for Making Your Own DVDs



If you use Movie Maker to make or copy
your own videos and burn them to DVDs, consider these tips:

The USB 1.0 standard is not fast enough to connect a camera or other
video input to your PC. Its throughput of 11 Mbps
isn't fast enough for capturing high-quality video,
which is 30 frames per second with 24-bit color at a resolution of
640 by 480, and requires speeds of at least 210 Mbps. USB 2.0, which
has a speed of 480 Mbps, and FireWire, which has a speed of 400 Mbps,
will work, however.

Make sure you have a
substantial amount of free hard disk space if you're
going to burn your videos to DVDs. The video will be cached onto your
hard disk before it's burned to DVDs, so
you'll typically need several free gigabytes.

Defragment your hard drive [Hack #74]
before creating and burning DVDs for best performance. If you have a
second hard drive, use that for DVD creation rather than your primary
hard drive. Regardless of the speed of your CPU, turn off any
background applications that are running when you import video and
create your DVD.

If you're burning high-quality video to a DVD,
figure that you'll be able to fit about an
hour's worth on a single DVD. At a lower quality
(lower bit rate), you can fit up to about two hours on a DVD. Keep in
mind, though, that if you write at the lower bit rate, the DVD might
not be able to be played on a set-top DVD player, though it will work
on your PC's DVD player.

There's no single accepted standard for DVD burning,
so not all DVD disks that you burn will work on all set-top DVD
players. Generally, most set-top DVD players will play DVD-R discs,
but they may not all play DVD-RW or DVD+RW disks. Manufacturer
information can't always be trusted, but check the
web sites for the latest details.

After you've created your video and
you're ready to burn it to a DVD, set aside plenty
of time. It can take up to two hours to burn a one-hour DVD,
depending on your CPU and drive speed.



10.6.5 See Also


If you want features beyond those offered by Windows Movie Maker, try
Ulead DVD Movie Factory. In addition to basic video-editing tools, it
lets you use transitions and add special effects and menus, and it
includes backgrounds, preset layouts, and music you can add to your
videos. In addition, it will burn to DVD, VCD, and SVCD and can save
files in a variety of video formats. It's shareware
and available to try for free, but you're expected
to pay $44.95 if you keep using it. It's available
from Internet download sites, as well as from http://www.ulead.com.



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