DVS Clipster Guide de l'utilisateur Page 40

  • Télécharger
  • Ajouter à mon manuel
  • Imprimer
  • Page
    / 428
  • Table des matières
  • MARQUE LIVRES
  • Noté. / 5. Basé sur avis des utilisateurs
Vue de la page 39
2-16
CLIPSTER Edit Tool User Guide
select between the various timecodes provided by the clips which may
give you more control over their position in the timeline.
In the Configuration Tool of the DVS software you can configure the
general way the software should deal with timeline and source time-
code (see “CLIPSTER Configurations” user guide for more informa-
tion). Here you can set in the respective group the type of source
timecode that the DVS software will use as the default source timecode.
Additionally, you can specify which timecode should be given out when
performing a play-out.
Furthermore, throughout the DVS software individual clips may use dif-
ferent source timecodes which is a setting that can be adjusted in the
clip’s properties (see section “Changing the Properties of Clips” on
page 4-21). The type of source timecode used by each clip can be
changed even when the clip is already used in the timeline of the Edit
Tool. And when clips do not provide a source timecode of their own,
you can set the clips to show a virtual source timecode. The DVS soft-
ware will then use the timecode specified as the source timecode offset
as the virtual source timecode.
2.6.2 About Keycode
Keycode information stored in file headers can be used in the DVS soft-
ware, for example, during a conforming process (see chapter “The
Conforming Tool” on page 8-1).
Keycode has its origin in the film world and is a variation of timecode
to identify frames on a film roll. It is a machine-readable code printed
at certain intervals along the edge of the camera negative film outside
the perforations. Besides containing data, for instance, about the film
type, the name of the manufacturer and the film stock, it is used to
number individual images, i.e. it provides a reference number
(<count>+<offset>) for the image where the keycode is written.
The numbering available via keycodes can be used, for example, to
match the film with a particular position of an EDL or cut list.
In the DVS software the keycode format normally is:
<manufacturer ID and film type><6-digit film roll
ID> <count>+<offset>.
Example: KK217312 5235+04
Vue de la page 39
1 2 ... 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 ... 427 428

Commentaires sur ces manuels

Pas de commentaire