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About: Rad Video Tools
Newsletter #13 began coverage of selected utilities
used with Movie Maker to do specialized tasks. It covered IrfanView and newsletters
since have focused on Paint, Virtual Dub, and TMPGEnc. Here's another in that series, this one about
Rad Video Tools.
A key reason to use this utility is to bridge the gap from the world
of Apple computers and their QuickTime video files that won't play in WMP or import into Movie Maker.
You can use Rad Video Tools to convert MOV files into AVI files you can work with.
And it's not just Apple computers. Many digital still cameras can record
video clips as QuickTime files with MOV extensions.
Here's the main working window of Rad Video Tools. You can see that
.mov is one of the file types listed. This utility handles them well. We'll take an overall look
at it, and then do a conversion from .mov to .avi in the mini-tutorial.
RAD Video Tools - Main
Menu

Before getting into it more, a few notes about things going on...
Notices
• I enjoy preparing these weekly newsletters and put more into their
preparation than I first envisioned, to the extent that I'm spending time writing them that perhaps
should be going into my next book.
They've been very well received and the subscriber list keeps growing,
as does my administrative efforts to maintain it. I need an appropriate way to balance future efforts,
and after lots of thinking decided to:
Effective immediately, I will no longer be accepting
new free subscribers.
Not everyone wants or needs the latest issue as it's released, and
many simply subscribe because it's free. Issue #26 will mark the half-year anniversary of the publication
and the end of the free subscription issues. There will now be an annual subscription fee of $20.
But older issues will continue to be archived for free online viewing.
Here are the new terms:
Regular subscriber
- $20 a year - for active readers who want to receive issues as they are released, and have access
to any special issue-related videos or downloads. The online material will be maintained for at
least 4 weeks after the issue, but not necessarily beyond that.
Casual reader - free
access to online archived issues... but associated online items and links will not be maintained.
Professional courtesy subscriber
- complimentary for those who have a professional reason to get issues as they are released. Rob
Morris, who provides a forum for newsletter info and archives the issues, is the best example.
As this issue goes out, I'm revising the main page of my website to
provide a link to purchase new or continued subscriptions...
Issue #27 and beyond will be sent only to paid regular and professional
courtesy subscribers.
Thank you for your ongoing interest, feedback and support.
• A reader of last week's newsletter made this good point about editing
the audio track of a video: "It's a far sight easier, quicker, and uses less disk space, to record
the audio to a WAV file and equalize it using an audio editing program such as Cool Edit
Pro. The whole process takes less than
a minute, and I do it this way all the time and it's a far sight easier than your overly tedious
method. Perhaps you should try it in future and find out just how much better and easier it is."
I haven't tried it and maybe I will... there's only one note in my
database about it, going back to an 8/23/02 post that reads:
"Yesterday I downloaded a demo of cool edit. I like what I see, but
the demo is only for a short time. You all talk about Cool Edit a lot.... but do you all have
the $300 program??? Is there something like it for a LOT less money (free is good)?"
• I'm back preparing newsletters and doing other work on my Toshiba
laptop.... but it's like having done a 'super-restore' and going back 1-1/2 years. Lots of software
updates to catch up to get it where it was when it went into the repair shop a few weeks ago.
I have SP2 on it already so it's up to MM2.1... interesting that only
two filters show up in that new option tab page. The InterVideo Audio Decoder is unchecked by default,
and the Panasonic DV Video Decoder is checked. The other 40 or so it that I had in my list when
it went off for repairs must have been from software I had added.... I'll be watching them come
back as I add the software back.
....on to the
topic of the week
Rad Video Tools - the big picture
What is it? here's
some info from the online help info:
The RAD Video Tools are a set of utilities for processing video, animation,
and sound data. They feature both of our video codecs: Bink Video, our latest 24-bit true-color
codec, and Smacker, our 8-bit 256-color codec.
Bink Video is a "better-than-DVD"
video codec. That is, it compresses better than DVD at up to three times the playback speed! Bink
is a hybrid block-transform and wavelet codec that can encode your video using 16 different compression
techniques (wavelet, DCT, motion compensation, a variety of vector quantizers, Smacker-style, and
more). With all of these techniques in one codec, Bink can handle pretty much any type of video.
It also has a psycho-acoustic based audio codec that is capable of 8 to 1 perceptually lossless
compression, so your audio will sound as good as your video looks!
Smacker is our 256-color
compressor for video and animation. It is used in all aspects of multimedia application design:
cinematics, cut-scenes, video-sprites, transparent videos, single-image decompression, scrolling
video backgrounds, and more. Smacker has been used in over 2,600 games because it's fast, it's easy-to-license,
it has a terrific SDK, and its video quality is unrivaled in 256 color mode.
the free download is at:
http://www.radgametools.com/smkdown.htm
Here's the main menu with a file selected to work with.
Menu Choices

File name: Select
the file you want to work with. If you just want to play a file, select it and click the "Play"
button. It'll play a version 9 WMV file or a type I DV-AVI file
by opening it in the Windows Media Player. It'll play an MOV file if you have the Quick Time Player
installed. And it has built in players for Bink and Smacker files.
Files of type: By
default, RAD Video Tools will display all media files, but you can use this pulldown to change the
file selection list. Version 9 WMV files can be selected.
The main menu choices are
started with the buttons at the bottom of the window:
Bink it: Compress
your movie with the true-color Bink codec.... it won't bink a WMV
file or a type I DV-AVI file.... convert the DV-AVI to type II
first and it'll work fine.... cancelling the rendering part way through will result in a partial
file that seems to play OK.
Smack it: Compress
your video file using the Smacker codec.... it won't smack a WMV
file or a type I DV-AVI file..... convert to type II and it works
fine. Unlike Bink, cancelling the rendering before it's finished will result in the partial file
being deleted.
Advanced play: Customize
settings to use for playback of the video. Advanced play options are available
only for Bink and Smacker files. If you've
highlighted a Bink file, then the Bink Advanced play screen will open. Similarly, if you highlight
a Smacker file, and hit the "Advanced Play" button, then the Smacker Advanced play window, which
is a little different, will open.
Mix in sound: The
Bink or Smacker audio mixer only opens with a Bink or Smacker file.
You only need to use the audio mixer when you want to replace or add another audio track to a video
file. Normally, you won't have to utilize this feature, because the compressors will automatically
compress the audio track of an AVI or QuickTime file in with the video frames.
Convert a file: The
RAD converter can convert almost any type of file to another type.
For example, you can convert a bunch of BMPs into an AVI, GIFs into JPEGs, Smackers into flics,
QuickTimes into AVIs, wave files into different sample rates, 24-bit images into 8-bit images, etc.
Analyze file: A visual
representation of a Bink or Smacker file's data rate. Here it's showing info about the sample Bink
file I'll be using in the mini-tutorial.
RAD Video Analysis
Tool

List files: You can
create a list file by clicking this button. A list file is a text file that contains a list of other
file names that you want to be treated as one big file. This allows you to compress multiple input
files into one output file.
Batch: Use the batch
editor to create a list of tasks that can be run unattended.
File info: About
the highlighted media file.
System info: Displays
some information about your computer.
Help: Opens the online
Help page.
FAQs: Opens the online
Frequently Asked Questions page.
Mini-Tutorial: Converting an MOV File to AVI
Let's do one exercise with the utility, the main reason for this issue,
converting a QuickTime MOV file to AVI.
I copied an MOV file from another computer, named it 'NewsletterSample'
and selected it in the main menu. Then I pressed the 'Convert a file' button.
Sample MOV File Selected

The output file window pops up, lets you select the output file type,
and choose a number of settings.
I'll just make sure that both video and audio steams are selected,
and not fill in any of the settings. I'll accept the default settings and tell it to make the output
file an AVI. From there I pressed the 'Convert' button to move on.
Output File Settings

When I first tried the conversion button, I got an error message. I
hadn't yet installed the QuickTime player on my Toshiba laptop, so it didn't have the needed QuickTime
decompression codec. Here's the link I used to get it:
http://www.apple.com/quicktime/download/
The last time I downloaded it and iTunes, they were different downloads.
Today they are bundled together.... after installing the package I tried pressing the Convert button
again.
This time it worked, giving me a drop down list of choices for the
compression codec. I didn't see the WMV9 option that I usually pick (guess I need to install the
full Windows Media codec package to have the additional optiongs). I then picked the Microsoft MPEG-4
codec, which also didn't work.
Choose Codec for the
AVI File Conversion

After trying a few more, I found a codec that worked - Microsoft Video
1.
A Conversion Done with
the Microsoft Video 1 Codec

To check the new AVI file, I imported it into Movie Maker 2.1 and previewed
it in the collection.
Converted File in MM2.1
Collection

It was fine, looking and sounding the same as the original MOV, and
now ready to use in a project.... this finishes the exercise.
Some additional comments about Rad Video Tools:
• When and why would you Bink or Smack a file?...
After Binking or Smacking a video you can use the Advanced Play options
with it... one of which is to Make EXE,
a self contained viewable package, a video file wrapped in a Bink or Smack player as an executable
file. Send it to someone running Windows 95 and they won't need a newer version of the Windows Media
Player or anything else. I put a copy of a Smacker exe online for you to check.... see below.
• Can you Bink or Smack a WMV file from Movie Maker? How About
a Photo Story?
No, it gives an error message. You would need to save it as a DV-AVI
file (type II) and then use that to Bink or Smack. It's easy enough to do by opening the WMV in
MM1 and saving it as a DV-AVI file.
• What are the relative file sizes of DV-AVI, WMV, Bink, and
Smack files? And how long does it take to render?
I made a 10 second DV-AVI file type II in MM1, using some footage from
a nice sunset a couple weeks ago. The 10 second DV-AVI clip was 38+ MB. From it I made these:
A high quality (NTSC) WMV file in MM2 - 2 MB - less than a minute to
render
A Bink file - 4 MB - 23 minutes to render
A Smack file (256 colors) - 2.8 MB - 9 minutes to render
Once you have the Bink or Smack file, turning it into a self-contained
executable takes only a split second, and the file size is only slightly larger than the video file
without the player.
The Bink and Smack files looked and sounded fine....
I put copies of two files
online for you to check and compare:
(1) the 2.0 MB high
quality WMV:
www.PapaJohn.org/PapaJohn/Newsletters/22-Sunset-10Seconds-HighQuality.wmv
(2) the 2.9 MB Smacker
self-contained executable:
www.PapaJohn.org/PapaJohn/Newsletters/22-Sunset-10Seconds-TypeII-Smack.exe
If you have a Unix, Mac, Windows NT, Windows 95, etc. computer to test
the Smacker file on, I'd appreciate feedback on how well it works on them.
• If you can convert an MOV file to AVI, can you use it to
convert an AVI file to MOV?
No... the MOV file type is not listed in the drop down list of output
file choices when doing a conversion. If you had a QuickTime encoder on your system, maybe the choice
would be included.
• Are there any other interesting things you can do with Rad
Video Tools?
It provides an option to get still pictures from a video file. BMP
and 6 other still picture types are listed as conversion output file types. I selected BMP with
the 10 second sunset clip in it and ended up with 300 pictures at 720x480 pixels, one from each
frame. You can specify a range of frames from ___ to ___ if you prefer.
And you can do the flip side, taking a series of still pictures and
convert them into a video or animation file.... selecting the first frame of a numbered series and
pressing the button to convert the file results in this message popping up:
I said Yes and it worked fine, rendering an AVI from the still pictures...
with no audio of course.
That's as far as this tutorial
goes. Some closing remarks
Closing
This is the first project I did with my repaired Toshiba laptop....
having it back with bare bones minimal software helped me appreciate the need for the codec from
the QuickTime Player.
When a computer is well outfitted, you often don't know what is needed
to do something.... when it just works fine. You could easily assume that RAD Video Tools has the
MOV decomprssion codec included in it.... which is why I'm now wondering if it can convert an AVI
to an MOV if the compression codec was already installed. I'll have to check it again after I reinstall
Premiere.
I look forward to comments and discussion about this and other newsletters
on the forums at:
www.windowsmoviemakers.net/forums/
Have a great week...
PapaJohn
Movie Maker 2 -
www.papajohn.org
Photo Story 2 -
www.photostory.papajohn.org
Products and Services
I'm involved in many things that support users of Movie Maker and PhotoStory, and adding more
daily. Here's a list of what is available to the public. Some are free and others are reasonably
priced.
Books:
Movie Maker 2 - Do Amazing Things (with
its online companion on
www.papajohn.org)
Movie Maker 2 - Zero to Hero (with support on the Friends of Ed forum at
http://friendsofed.infopop.net/2/OpenTopic)
When ordering these books or anything else from Amazon, I'd appreciate you using the links on
the main page of
www.papajohn.org - I get some income from Amazon that way, and it doesn't cost you any more.
It'll help keep most of my services free.
Websites:
Movie Maker 2 -
www.papajohn.org - two goals: to help you solve problems, and to be the online companion to
the Do Amazing Things book... and currently thinking of another goal of movie making and editing
styles.
PhotoStory 2 -
www.photostory.papajohn.org - a full tutorial about using it. It's not a problem-solving site.
Online Support - Forums, Channels and Newsgroups
I'm a regular on many online forums and newsgroups, the main ones
being:
Movie Maker 2 and PhotoStory 2 forums at
www.windowsmoviemakers.net/forums/
Movie Maker 2 forum at SimplyDV.com
www.simplydv.co.uk/simplyBB/viewforum.php?f=21
Windows XP Movie Maker newsgroup at microsoft.public.windowsxp.moviemaker
PhotoStory items are covered at microsoft.public.plus
Newsletter:
Weekly Movie Maker 2/PhotoStory 2 newsletter. Subscribing
is free via the link on the main page of
www.papajohn.org
Tentative topics for upcoming newsletters (subject to change):
#22 - Another in the series of primers about utilities used in conjunction
with Movie Maker and PhotoStory. I don't know which utility will be covered yet.
#23 - (Open - do you have any requests?)
Older newsletters are archived by Rob Morris at:
http://www.windowsmoviemakers.net/PapaJohn/Index.aspx
Software:
Transition Maker 2 (TM2) - a utility to make the ultimate
in personal and custom transitions for Movie Maker 2:
www.PapaJohn.org/PapaJohn/MM2/TM2
TM2 is a joint effort by Patrick Leabo, the programmer, and myself.
I routinely beta test the Pixelan packages and think very
highly of their people and products: Their SpiceFX packages of additional transitions and effects
for Movie Maker 2 are available at:
www.pixelan.com/mmp/intro.htm
Fee-based services:
If
you can't save a movie because your project has become too complex, e-mail it to me and
I'll divide it into manageable sub-projects for you, and provide detailed instructions to render
the parts and assemble them into your final movie. $49.95 - for details, see the sidebar on
the Problem Solving > Can't Save a Movie page of
www.papajohn.org
Movie Maker 2/Photo Story 2 training and support services
start at $50 per hour - email me at
PapaJohn@CharterMi.net and I'll help you determine your needs, and work with you to plan
and implement them.
This newsletter is a good one to start including wedding
website/video packages, starting at $2,500 + travel expenses. See
www.jill-mark.papajohn.org for a sample.
About John 'PapaJohn' Buechler from Microsoft.com
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John "PapaJohn" Buechler, of Kalamazoo, Mich., goes by PapaJohn
online. An avid user of Movie Maker since its first release,
and a regular supporter of the community of Movie Maker users,
John received a 2003 MVP award from Microsoft for that support.
In March 2003, he started a comprehensive website about Movie
Maker 2 at
www.PapaJohn.org.
He maintains the website, writes books and articles, teaches,
and provides support services - all for the community of Movie
Maker 2 users. An engineer by formal education, John is a computer
database and multimedia expert by business and personal experience.
He co-authored the first book about Movie Maker 2 and is actively
working on a second one. You can find his advice in the
Windows XP Movie Maker newsgroup and in the
Windows Movie Makers Forums. |
This
newsletter is republished with permission of John "PapaJohn" Buechler.
Please note that this is an archive of newsletters and some
information may become outdated. PapaJohn, and the webmaster of this
site, provides this information
"AS IS" with no warranties.
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