Wednesday, 22 December 2010
Windows Live Movie Maker 2011 for educational video creation
I have been assisting with some geology field trials of the TurningPoint system headed by fellow Learning Technologist Sid White, and thought this would be a great opportunity to experiment with the latest FREE Windows Live Movie Maker 2011 for Windows 7 to create the video above. Users will be pleased to know that Microsoft have expanded the range of accepted video formats. It's now a simple case of drop and drag into the work area and start editing. All the videos used for this clip came from a Canon 550D (HD, 25fps), the files are in MOV format, but I found they easily dropped straight into the work area. The software then creates a low quality render of the video so you can then experience the video at all the stages of the editing - in real-time!
There is a very good range of transitions, some professional and other perhaps now entering the realms of cliché, however, this did not detract from being able to create a fairly professional output from this software. Notably, users can only add one extra sound track, which is a bit of a limitation. I was particularly impressed with how well it handed every drag and dropped video, each could be cropped and/or copied while inside the editor, very slick.
The other excellent additions were the ability to upload directly to YouTube and also to create a DVD of your video! I was able to output my video as a sensibly compressed WMV (Windows Media Video), which I also found I could easily upload to YouTube or the University's UpMedia area for inclusion on iTunesU.
All in all a very excellent free software package. Could this be the Windows 7 tool of choice for making educational videos fast and efficiently amongst busy academics? Time will tell...
Labels:
editing,
fieldwork,
movie,
Movie Maker 2011,
news,
podcasting,
video,
Windows 7,
YouTube
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