To make it clear: Keyno is an awesome tool (what I've read). … You usually end up with more redundant data than you ever need. It seems you know exactly what my dilemma is and thanks for offering the help I am looking for. In Kyno, JKL don't work, and of course you have no skimmer. You could browse anything and directly organize it non-proprietarily before importing it to the own library. In a perfect world, FCP X had this capability too. I think one fishing video may not be the only task sodabiscuit12345 deals with. I made quite a few wrong decisions in the past, and it will need more than a few days to fully evaluate the purchase. And they have names then!Īlso, in regard to all kind of media, it (kind of) swallowes iTunes, Photos (why is the german version spelled Fotos?) and of course Finder. With Kyno, I can view clips that are still on the card, trim and prepare them (without any IMPORT - step) and export them to a comparatively small folder. You usually end up with more redundant data than you ever need. Libraries are incomprehensible without it. But then again, if I use FCP X exclusively to manage my clips, I also need FCP X to access them. I see your point, and that was my initial impression too. says that would be "use a sledgehammer to crack a nut". with all respect, Axel, but isn't that ' mit Kanonen auf Spatzen schießen'? You'll find anything living on your system with ease and can play it back instantly. And they are prepared, you may leave files in place. > you can "send" media to FCP X with shift cmd f. You can search by existing metadata like file size, frame dimensions, aspect ratios, frame rates, codec, date created asf.) and add new metadata (ratings, tags, descriptions) and you can batch-rename them. > it's a smart media browser that will find video, audio or stills on everything that's connected to your Mac, deeply hidden in folder structures, card structures, even FCP X libraries. You can batch-transcode them to many codecs or just wrap the native codec. Then you >export >subclips to a chosen destination (Kyno also creates folders and subfolders if you wish). Among other things, which I will list below, it allows just what you are asking for: make a selection with i & o, hit "s" to make it a subclip (and optionally rename it = "ss"), then make another selection, hit "s" and so forth. As of this writing, there is no way to alter the position of the watermark.A few days ago I bought Kyno (a few weeks after the trial expired, during which I didn't see huge advantages). The watermark will show up near the bottom-right corner of your video. Make any other adjustments to resolution or audio quality that you want, and press Make Movie when you’re finished.Ĭhoose a place to save your newly watermarked video, and voila! Go get a cup of coffee while your video exports. Just type the text for the watermark and hit OK. All you need to do is click the Adjustments button near the bottom-right. In the Exporter window that spawns, don’t be intimidated by the multitude of options in front of you. Next, go to the File menu and Export to your desired format. For kicks, I’m going to add a watermark to Jesus and Frosty, the first animated short by Matt and Trey (of Southpark fame). Adding Watermarksįirst of all, launch MPEG Streamclip and open the video to which you want to add a watermark. Special note for Windows users: MPEG Streamclip requires either Quicktime OR Quicktime Alternative (but not both!). These features alone are enough to make MPEG Streamclip an essential tool for both Windows and Mac users, but the program has another trick up its sleeve: it can also add watermarks to video. As an added bonus, it can also directly download videos from YouTube and Google Video. Not only can it encode/convert between formats, it can also cut, trim, and join movies together. MPEG-Streamclip is a powerful FREE tool for working with video. UPDATE: Looks like MPEG Streamclip is dead. Add Watermarks to Video for Free with MPEG Streamclip NovemReading time: 3 minutes
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