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Everything posted by Lin Evans
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One Thousand Seven Hundred Twenty Eight
Lin Evans replied to Lin Evans's topic in Slideshows & AV Shows
Hi Jeff, Yes, it's 3D Transform in 2D space so it is indeed an illusion but when viewed shortly after seeing the separation against a rotating 3D object the mind adds the depth even when viewing straight-on. If you want to enhance the 3D effect of text using the Pan Z feature, you may also want to consider using the "Show Back Side" check-box. When the backside of the text is visible when it is linked as a child object to a rotating three dimensional object, the 3D effect is enhanced I think. If you download the same link again - I have added a "Go Denver Broncos" text to one side of the cube and checked the "Show Back Side" for that one only. You can see the difference as the cube rotates and get an idea of how being able to see the back side of the text in reverse adds to the illusion. Best regards, Lin -
One Thousand Seven Hundred Twenty Eight
Lin Evans replied to Lin Evans's topic in Slideshows & AV Shows
Hi Colin, Thanks! Actually, the process is fairly straight-forward and not difficult to do. It just takes a bit of time and patience. I have a couple tutorials in the tutorials section (linked to Youtube) on creating the 3D Video Wall which explains how to construct the basic element of a video wall used in the creation of the cube. The same process can be used to create a wide variety of curved or flat displays which can then be incorporated in various 3D transform geometric patterns. It's mostly not relevant to serious presentation slideshows, but more toward animation fun. The nice thing is that PTE actually is much easier to use for some of these projects than some of my 3D software such as Blender and Maya. Best regards, Lin -
One Thousand Seven Hundred Twenty Eight
Lin Evans replied to Lin Evans's topic in Slideshows & AV Shows
Hi Judy, That's me about 28 years ago. In my youth, I was a musician. I was a trumpeter with the California School Band and Orchestra and I played guitar in several Bluegrass bands in my younger days - paid my way through college - After that, I did a little composing and the background music is one I called "Tranquility." Best regards, Lin -
One Thousand Seven Hundred Twenty Eight
Lin Evans replied to Lin Evans's topic in Slideshows & AV Shows
Hi Robert, Thanks! - it's just a fun project to keep me busy... Best regards, Lin -
One Thousand Seven Hundred Twenty Eight
Lin Evans replied to Lin Evans's topic in Slideshows & AV Shows
Hi Jeff, Thanks for checking it out!! Glad to see you back on the forums!! The text effect is done by adjusting the 3D parameter "Pan Z." In this particular example, a setting of -17 produces the distance from the rotating cube. If you put in two images as "objects" in the objects list and position them very close to each other, then set the 3D horizontal axis for each to about 45 degrees and play with the Pan Z value for one of them you will get a feel for how it works. Best regards, Lin -
One Thousand Seven Hundred Twenty Eight
Lin Evans replied to Lin Evans's topic in Slideshows & AV Shows
Hi Patrik Thanks!! Yes, it could definitely "mess" with one's mind!!! LOL. As I said, only an experiment as part of another project but does show that "multiple" videos are a distinct possibility with PTE Best Regards, Lin -
One Thousand Seven Hundred Twenty Eight
Lin Evans replied to Lin Evans's topic in Slideshows & AV Shows
Hi Ken, Thanks for checking it out. PTE is a pretty incredible environment to play in.... Best regards, Lin -
Been working on a little project and thought it might be interesting to demo some of the amazing possibilities with PTE. Not that it's anything really useful for most slideshows, but just shows a little of what's possible with this unique software. I don't believe this can be done with any other presentation slideshow software. This was done "entirely" with PicturesToExe. One thousand seven hundred twenty eight independent displays running videos simultaneously on the six faces of this rotating cube. It's part of something else I'm doing, but I thought it might be interesting for some..... Link to zipped Windows Exe - about 50 meg Lin
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How do I find where projects are stored
Lin Evans replied to Les Brooks's topic in General Discussion
Hi Les, Nice to see you over here! It's definitely been a while - I gradually stopped going there after Jimmie Burton passed away - he was a Facebook friend - Dave Thomas still is... PTE doesn't delete any project files - they "shouldn't" be deleted unless the user does it intentionally. It could be that something is going on which hasn't yet been documented since there are two examples and both with the same OS and configuration. When Igor gets back (He's away for a couple weeks) he will look into it I'm sure. It's probably a good idea to save the project in a couple places just for added insurance until this issue get's resolved. PTE has been really pretty much free of strange occurrences such as this. Actually, I have PTE project files from the late 90's from even before Igor first published PTE which still reside where I first put them so this is a new wrinkle which will need looking into. Best regards, Lin -
Hi Bert, You can't control a video like you control an exe file using the keyboard commands. In order to control a video, you need to use the Video Navigation Bar. A video consists of a playback of stored multiple images while an exe file consists of a command structure which instructs the computer to behave in a certain way. When an image is zoomed, rotated, panned, etc., in an exe file, there is only a single relative image stored inside the exe file. The computer is then instructed in real time to create these intermediate images whether larger, smaller, rotated, panned, etc. But in a video, each of the images must be created first and then stored in the file itself. This is why video files are so much larger than exe files. So what has to happen with a command to stop or pause a video is to interrupt the playback via the player. This instruction is not contained in the video itself, but rather the result of commands given to the video playing device and that Navigation Bar actually only works while the video is being played back on the computer itself. When your video is played back on a television, etc., and the computer is no longer connected to the external device, the player associated with that device has its own set of commands embedded in the player and having no relationship with your computer. The bottom line is that you can not use the various command structure designed to control an exe file with video. Best regards, Lin
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How do I find where projects are stored
Lin Evans replied to Les Brooks's topic in General Discussion
Did you add or remove any external devices from your computer such as a USB flash device, external hard driver, external DVD player, etc.? First, do a wild card search on all your attached devices for all PTE files. For example, let's say you have a C: and an E: drive. Search for *.pte on these devices and see if the pte file name shows up. If it does, right click on it and look at "Properties" to see where it is located and on which device. PTE does not save images, but rather creates a PTE file which tells the program where they are located. Anything which could alter the source of the files such as unplugging a device or plugging in a new device which might change the cascading device structure could effectively hide these source files from PTE. So the first order of business should be to search for the all PTE files on all devices attached to see whether or not your PTE file is actually somewhere you don't expect it to be. Even if the PTE file has been inadvertently "erased," unless you have added or deleted a significant amount of data since, it will still be somewhere even if the file name is not visible. Look in your deleted folder. Right click on the "trash" and make sure it's not in there. If all else fails and you can't find the PTE file anywhere, use a file recovery software to search for it on the hard disc before saving or deleting anything else. Best regards, Lin -
How do I find where projects are stored
Lin Evans replied to Les Brooks's topic in General Discussion
A good way to start would be to just pick one of the slides that you are certain was in the show and do a Windows search to see where it turns up. When it's found, right click and look at properties to see which folder it's found in. The user has the choice of where to save project files such. PTE has also a feature "File" "Open Recent Project." You access it from the "File" in the tool bar on the upper left of your screen when you open PTE. That would be the first place I would look. Be absolutely certain you are opening the correct version of PTE. If you have downloaded both 7.5x and the version 8.0 beta, the icons look identical. Hover your mouse cursor over the PTE icon to see which version the icon calls. Best regards, Lin -
A New Menu Concept - At Least For Me...
Lin Evans replied to Lin Evans's topic in Slideshows & AV Shows
Hi Jeff, Out of old habits, I used "run application" then placed another run application in the separate shows. I did just try run slideshow and return with a show made with 5.3 and like with earlier version, the version number must still be the same for that feature (run slideshow with return) to work. I misunderstood your earlier question. Best regards, Lin -
A New Menu Concept - At Least For Me...
Lin Evans replied to Lin Evans's topic in Slideshows & AV Shows
Hi Geoff, Thanks! Actually, the menu doesn't really care about the version of the exe it calls so no rework was necessary. Most of the shows were done with the beta, but a couple were with 7.5 although I've tested it with some old 4.x shows and everything works as expected. It's great to have the options we get with the beta version of 8.0 and having the option of using video is a big plus I think. For clarity, I misunderstood what you were actually asking so to avoid confusion for the reader - yes the version number must be the same for "run slideshow and return" but adding a "run application" at the end of older slideshows to call the menu is indeed necessary if you want them to automatically return to the calling menu. Best regards, Lin -
Expanding Audio Waveform/Expanding Audio Timeline
Lin Evans replied to Lin Evans's topic in Tutorials & Video Lessons
Hi Folks, Thanks! This one is really just more of an "explanation" than a tutorial, but I have had a couple emails from forum members asking about this and I thought that perhaps actually seeing the effects might be useful. Please forgive me for calling the audio keypoints "keyframes," in the video but it's a long held habit which I frequently slip back into. Long ago when Igor first introduced the "Keyframe" concept, he called them "Keypoints" which made perfectly good logical sense, However, because with video software manipulation effects are done at "frame" intervals, the term "keyframe" had been in common use for a long time. In consideration of this, Igor decided to change the terminology for these points in time where we elect to make changes to keyframe. Well, keyframe was only really more meaningful when discussing video because the smallest division along the timeline for change with a video is at a single frame division. But with audio, the changes can be at virtually "any" time within the most discrete digital divisions provided by the audio frequency, so "Keypoint" is truly more meaningful. Truly, because we are dealing with a continuum of time with our original still images "Keypoint" makes more sense to me and I probably should be more careful with my descriptive language. Just keep in mind that pertaining to PTE these days when the term "Keypoint" is used it refers to those points along the timeline when changes to "Audio" are made. When "Keyframe" is used it refers to points along the timeline when some visual effect is implemented. I hope this hasn't been totally confusing - LOL Best regards, Lin -
Hi Barry, I can't be absolutely certain, but I "suspect" the reason for the default being glued is that this is required for linear action which is the default. What actually might" be a viable work-around would be to have a check-box to check all separate here positions with a single keystroke rather than having to attend to each separately. Of course we still would need the option of handling each individually for some special animation creations, but being able to perform the separate here function with a single keystroke rather than multiple mouse clicks might be a huge time saver. Best regards, Lin
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A New Menu Concept - At Least For Me...
Lin Evans replied to Lin Evans's topic in Slideshows & AV Shows
Hi Mur, Actually, I have posted already several tutorials on this as well as a link to the free software to download to allow you to easily create some of the water effects. Here's the link - My link Tutorials number 42, 43, 44, 45 - scroll to near the bottom of the page for download links... Best regards, Lin -
Added new tutorial for those who have not yet learned how to expand the audio waveform and/or audio timeline in 8.0 beta. Not a dissertation, but just a quick look at how the new waveform with keyframes and audio timeline works. Also includes a few comments about why I would use the slide list rather than the timeline to switch positions of slides. Here's a link - it's also linked in my main tutorials list as number 46. My Link - about 86 meg download... Lin
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Need Advice on Timelapse and zooming in / motion
Lin Evans replied to GeoPic's topic in General Discussion
Hi Neil, Thanks! Thanks for the reminder! True, but the majority of our PTE users do not have CS6 nor are most on the Adobe Cloud so for the majority, the video capabilities are in the Extended versions. Best regards, Lin -
Need Advice on Timelapse and zooming in / motion
Lin Evans replied to GeoPic's topic in General Discussion
Hi Dave, Just want to remind folks who are using Photoshop and contemplating video time lapse creation, that to do any video editing with Photoshop, one must have the extended version of Photoshop or Photoshop CS6 which has video capabilities in the non-extended version - Thanks Neil for the reminder.... Excellent video tutorial, but makes me appreciate the simplicity and visual ease of edit with PTE even more. The number of steps necessary with Photoshop to accomplish what was done in the tutorial shows the power of Photoshop Extended as a video editing tool, but also focuses the viewers attention on the complexity of Photoshop. Of course the facility to immediately change the video resolution in Photoshop before rendering is a powerful feature. Some of the things shown in the tutorial such as masking are far easier and more powerful with PTE in my opinion. Best regards, Lin -
Need Advice on Timelapse and zooming in / motion
Lin Evans replied to GeoPic's topic in General Discussion
Hi Dave, Maybe I didn't make it clear ... That's why I said there are two ways to create it. The higher resolution images, during the creation of the original MP4 are zoomed into and the result is a 1080p image created from the 10 or so high resolution images rather than from 1080p resolution images. If the original video is created without zooming and subsequently zoomed into as a video, there is no advantage in using higher resolution images. I believe it might be more difficult to zoom into the still images because one would necessarily have to match the degree of ending zoom on the first image to the degree of starting zoom on the second image, etc., and we're talking, in the relevant case, about one second frames. The result might be better, depending on the degree of zoom and the quality of the originals to do the zooms via the stills, but it might also not be worth the added effort. I'm not certain which way would actually work better in real practice because it would be necessary to probably use the navigation bar and "drag" (scrub) through a video to place keyframes for video zoom in and out. I usually like to do my zooming in camera when shooting video, but in the case of time-lapse photography I suppose one would just have to experiment to find the best solution depending on individual circumstances. Best regards, Lin