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fh1805

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Posts posted by fh1805

  1. Tom,

    The first effect is very possible in PTE. It is, after all, very similar to a Rubik's Cube (which, you may recall, I have already created using PTE v6). The effect here has more layers but these layers turn about only one axis. The catch would be that the images would have to be pre-cut into the strips. So I guess that means it would have to be a template rather than a custom transition.

    The second one could certainly be set up as a custom transition. The shutter leafs would be objects that were common to all uses of this effect. The actual images are being used "in one piece" so the problems inherent in the previous effect do not apply in this instance.

    regards,

    Peter

  2. ...it happens in all previous beta-versions, RC and final version 7.5.

    If you start PicturesToExe and switch at least one time to the timeline view (before the steps you've described) this problem will not occur.

    Igor,

    I confirm that your workaround works for me! I cannot check other versions of v7.5 as I have uninstalled all the betas and now have only the official release code (at v7.5.1) installed.

    regards,

    Peter

  3. Using v7.5.1 and working in the Slides view, I select a slide in the Slide List (let's say slide #14 at 1m36s offset into the sequence). I then switch to the Timeline view. Slide #14 is still the selected slide but the Timeline display has repositioned itself to show the very first slide. To see my selected slide in the Timeline I have to scroll right. This is very annoying and time consuming. Has anyone else experienced this?

    Peter

  4. When will we get a chance to see your creations?

    Lin,

    Thanks for your congratulations. The problem, as ever in the UK, is that of copyright clearance on the audio track. The Copyright Clearance scheme licences, that UK AV workers operate under, whilst giving us freedom to use almost any material form sources that we have purchased, place severe restrictions on the showing of the finished work to the public. In essence, we are restricted to showing them to camera clubs, AV clubs, at AV competitions and AV festivals, and to help bona fide charities raise funds.

    regards,

    Peter

  5. I wonder if it has anything to do with the fact that the file was created using pte 7 and now I am working and trying to save in 7.5. I get a message saying that the pte file will no longer work with ver.7, so I suppose that you are forced to save with a different file name, which then retains the old file which can still be opened in ver.7

    Arthur,

    What you describe here is normal PTE behaviour. The file structure and content of a v7.5 .pte file is different to that of a v7.0 .pte file. So you are warned that saving the file will/may make it unworkable in the earlier version. This is a very different situation to "Access denied" from the Windows operating system. If we are to give you good advice, I think we need to know exactly what your problem symptoms are. A screengrab or two would help make this clear to us.

    regards,

    Peter

  6. Cedric,

    I do not use PTE to record comments so cannot accurately reproduce your problem. If I add an audio file and then go back to that slide, I no longer have "Add..." as an option, only "Remove..." or "Replace...". If I choose to "Replace..." PTE then replaces correctly. What happens in your case if you "Remove..." the audio file before making the new recording? Does that give you a work-around?

    Peter

  7. Mike,

    Why not build up to your finally desired result in a series of smaller "learning bites"? First, learn how to zoom an image. Then learn how to pan an image. Then learn how to introduce a "picture in picture". Then put all three pieces of knowledge to work and build the sequence that you really want.

    To zoom or pan an image you need to be working in the Objects and Animation window. You need to assign two keyframes: one to specify the start conditions and the start time of the effect, the other to specify the end conditions and the end time.

    To introduce a "picture within a picture" you need to add an additional image object to your existing image (again working in the O&A window). This additional image object can be animated using the same technique that you used for your main image.

    As you seem to want to "play to learn", I'm not giving you step by step instructions - just a pointer as to what to do. If this isn't enough detail, come back with more specific questions about the things that still baffle you.

    regards,

    Peter

  8. The old "Fade In/Out" transition never took one image to black then brought the next up from black. It always did a dissolve. I think that is why it has been renamed. Its name now reflects exactly what it does. As far as I know (using PTE since mid-2005), there never was a Fade transition which did as you describe, i.e. to black-from black.

    Peter

  9. In the world of film and video, the term dissolve is used when two images "dissolve" one into the other. The term fade is used for a fade to or from black.

    When slide shows were produced using two projectors and a control unit linking them, a dissolve was achieved by fading one projector lamp down as the other was faded up. The images dissolved, the projector lamps faded.

    The basic transition between two images should, therefore, be called a dissolve.

    Peter

  10. Hi petejack,

    It is probably best not to add a similar problem into an existing topic. It always runs the risk of the discussion switching to the new problem and forgetting about the problem that was first reported. Far better to open a new topic for the new problem, even if it seems similar. If the investigation confirms that the two are actually the same problem, the moderator's can then combine the two topics into one.

    regards,

    Peter

  11. Another case (an inconsistency) that may be a bit confusing regarding transitions: In the project options we have only one choice for basic transitions (Dissolve), while for particular slides there are two of them (Dissolve and Quick).

    Xaver,

    I lobbied long and hard with Igor to put in a "Quick" option into Project Options - and failed! He argued that it was there if you de-selected every option. That is, of course, true but it's not intuitively obvious for a new user.

    Peter

  12. I don't understand the reasoning... I assume that if you do nothing in the Project Options>transitions, that all the transitions are available and used on a random basis...

    Arthur,

    You do understand the reasoning! As you have deduced, the feature allows the user to have a random selection of transitions - not just from the entire pool of transition types, but from just a subset of the transition types if so desired.

    Peter

  13. Pete,

    I cannot speak for iPad videos but today I have been playing around with iPhone videos to run on my Samsung mobile phone. A 1920x1080 project which produced a 255MB EXE file (heavy with embedded video clips and a WAV soundtrack) produced a 50MB video file for iPhone. The only customization I did was during the output to video where I set the width and height values to fit within the native resolution of my phone: 480x320. It is quite possible that I could have reduced the video file size still further if I had experimented with some of the other options.

    regards,

    Peter

  14. Eric,

    I'm still not commenting on a specific technique. From your screen shots I think you are possibly making things more complicated than they should be at this stage of your learning. You seem to have created a slide with a lot of objects on it. You may be better off working "one small step at a time". My suggestion would be to get the video and one still image working as you want. Then add a second still image and get that working as you want, then add the third still image, etc. Working in this manner, one step at a time, I feel sure you will build your confidence in what you are doing. You will also be taking a steady set of checkpoints in respect of your understanding.

    regards,

    Peter

  15. Ray,

    In Project Options > Transitions, when you click on an arrow for, in your example, the Push transition, you are turning that particular direction "OFF" (watch how the background of the arrow changes colour). Things work this way so the user can, if they wish, have random transitions from just a subset of all the transitions.

    In Customize Slide > Transitions, clicking on one of the arrows, selects that particular direction of motion. (Again, watch the background colour of the arrow)

    To summarize: in Project Options you turn OFF the directions you do not want, in Customize Slide you turn ON the direction that you do want.

    regards,

    Peter

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