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Others say..."Great for the Home User"I have been using Ulead Video Studio 6 for over a year for editing my videos and preparing them for burning to DVD, and it has given me 95% satisfaction, so I recently upgraded to 7. For video editing software under $100, I don't think you can beat UVS7. I agree that it does take some getting used to, but if you're not in a rush to do a perfect production the day you get it, and allow yourself some tinkering time, you'll see that it works and works well. Mine has never dropped a frame during capture, which itself is worth a lot. The edit "flow" is natural and very flexible -- but, again, I agree that it takes some getting used to. And the quality of the final video or disk is very nice, which is what it's all about. Personally, I think it could use more choices for title animations, which, right now, is the only negative thing I can say about it. If you get the download version, be sure to go back and get the 7.01 patch and the "extra content," which is many more effects and filters. You'll be cheating yourself if you don't. Again, I don't think a home digital video buff can find better software for this price.
"Better Than Pinnacle but takes some getting used to" I am back to Ulead Vis. Studio after having tried Pinnacle version 8 I got Ulead VS Version 5 free with a Firewire board and was getting tired of its limitations so when Pinnacle version 8 came out with great reviews I bought it and was disappointed. So I bought Ulead VisualStudio version 7. Pinnacle 8 wouldn't read some of my AVI or MPEG files (Windows Media Player, Realplayer, and Quicktime would) but would read others. I guess you have to load it with Pinnacle for it to read the AVIs and MPEGs. Video editing takes a lot of CPU power with either editor and my new AMD Athlon 2400 is about adequate - any less and I wouldn't try it. With VS version 7 I was able to make some VCDs (320x240 resolution), Super VCDs (640x480 resolution), and WMVs (higher compression than MPEG), and played them on my DVD player and emailed them to friends with good results. For example, in the Pinnacle product, you have a single brightness control but in VS 7 you have to apply a filter with confusing controls - the default is to start bright and end the clip on the brightest setting. Most of the time, you want the whole clip brighter but when you fool around with the controls you realize the VS filter allows you to set the brightness at any setting at any point in the clip so it can start at one setting, smoothly go to a higher setting 3 seconds into the clip and then smoothly back to a lower setting. There seem to be no real limits on the number of different points you can set in a clip. This works with all the transition settings of which there are a fair few. The many transitions available between clips are also quite nice, and reasonably flexible, though I think crossfade is the simplest and best - otherwise you distract the viewer with special effects instead of the video you are trying to show. When you load from your camcorder the software will automatically split it into scenes and load a transition (your choice or randomly selected). This is very handy. Some differences make you feel you need both software to get the best results. For slow or speeded up motion, Ulead lets you choose any %-age increase or decrease while Pinnacle limits you to specific settings, but Pinnacle allows you to opt for not smoothly interpolatig frames whch gives you a very nice effect for some sports actions. There are some other improvements I can think of but if you fool around with this you will find you can do most things pretty easily. Each filter degrades the video quality so you need to be careful with what you do. VS does some things very well, but in other cases the techniques take some getting used to. I can't afford to buy every video movie maker but Pinnacle 8 got the best reveiws in the magazines and I think Ulead VS 7 is better - for under $500 software.
"Difficult until you play around with it." I must admit this was a bit intimidating at first the screen that comes up is just not your average MS window so it threw me off. However once I played around a bit setting up project (about 5 or six) this is pretty easy. I like that you can rip and splice sound files visually. I don't like the preview window. It is unnecessarilly huge and plays movie clips when saving which keeps me from playing Freecell while I wait. I don't think this was meant for large professional projects but it's great for a home user and beginners who are willing to take the 30 minutes to fool with the controls or read the online manual. I'm sorry any one who says this is hard to use just didn't try or was expecting way to much from a product aimed for the home user. PS I haven't had a single error using this.
"Its friendly software for the beginners" I have tried adobe premiere but its to complicated and the price its expensive. When I tried the Video studio 7, its so impress me. Easy to used event for the beginner. Its lot of feature also although it is the few additional video clips but you will satisfy to used that. You can make dubbing your vice or music with this video, edit your screenplay, add the text with 3D motion, add special effect and lot of feature with the simple click. When you finish your editing you just click share button and you have able to save your project to DVD, VCD or event in your miniDV format. It's wonderful for the beginner event for professional's video editor. To have the fastest editing process ypu need Pentium IV/ 2.4 Ghz, 512 Mb memory, 128 Mb Video card memory, at least 40 Gb Hard disk and I' Link Card to connect your camcorder to your PC. You will enjoy your family video with this software
"A poor engineered software" Ulead's products are easy to use with a pretty good workflow design. However, poor engineered with lots glitches. The products all require high cpu and memory usage and frequently lock up. Recommend it but do not go close to the limit.
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Videostudio 7
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List Price : $99.99
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What our customer's say!"Outstanding piece of software", Ulead Videostudio 7 is an amazing product. It's one of the most powerful, easy-to-use video editing software that I ever came across. The interface does take a little to get used to, but once you are fluid in navigating around the various functions, editing becomes an absolute blast! I had no problems importing footage from my DV mini-camera (which the software came with!) as well as my DV camcorder. Under a firewire connection, I was able to record straight to the software with the nimblest of ease! Rendering, while it can be time-consuming, is equipped with a whole bunch of functions and settings to yield the kind of video file you want. You can also make a DVD or VCD. Since I don't have a DVD burner yet, I can't say if DVD creation is a seamless process, but it is VERY easy to make a VCD and a whole lot of fun too! Yes, it does have some flaws. It can crash at times when you least expect it so be sure to save your work often and upgrade to the latest patches. The transitional effects with text could also use some streamlining as you can have titles fade in and fade out but not crossfade. Aside from these small quirks, videostudio is phenomenal. I've been using it for a few years and it's met all my video editing needs. Now I'm really curious as to how the later versions of this software perform. Perhaps I should upgrade? "A pretty good product for home movie editing", I spent less than 5 hours to learn how to use this product, and afterward I understand the basics and start to edit my first DVD home movie with music background and everything runs smoothly. The user interface is intuitive. Even after 5 hours of studying, I am able to understand the flow. The PDF manual is quite good, if I have problems I can easily find out from this manual. You can import media and edit it, once you start your project, the software automatically goes to the capture mode, so if you have a firewire hooks up to a Sony/Cannon camorder, you will have total control of this camorder, and start downloading. One word of caution downloading takes a lot of CPU power. This step is very easy, and the software does it all for you. The output audio is very good, and put Rock, folk, easy listening, New age music and they all sound good. On a larger project, it may get slow,in my case I have a AMD 2200 system, 1 GB of Ram, and 200 GB of hard drive, so for me is a little slow while doing editing and previewing, but it still does it job well. So I think if I update my machine to more than 3 ghz, I think I'll be fine. I had one crash, and it probably runs out of virtual memory; all I did was just to reboot my system and I am fine. But one thing to remind is to save you file frequently. The feature sets are very rich for regular home users. I have no complaint for a product that is less than $89, for my case I got it with my capture card. Overall, the money for this product is wll spent, and I am very happy with it. Since I have no problems with it, I never call the tech support, so I have no comments on this. BTW, you don't need to be a rocket scientist to understand this product, this is a real good deal for home movie editing. "EASY TO USE product", Great price and easy to use. It comes with a tutorial disc that teaches you visually how to use this product. So anyone who says they are "baffled" must not have used this disc. Bottom line, its an easy product to use. It's not going to give you something that resembles what you see on TV, with all the great special effects you might see in a commercial, movie, or TV program, but for what its designed to do - create home DVD's - this product works great. I created a 45 DVD on my nephew's first 5 years of life, added music, such as the theme to "Superman" and "Ghostbusters" (when showing clips from Halloweens of the past), along with graphics, and worth while transition effects. My family loved it. If you are looking for software to enhance your home movies, one word of warning however - you need to ensure you have a computer capable of handling this or any of these types of product. I have a very compatible computer (3.2 ghz, 200 gig, 512 mb ram, etc.) so I have no problem using this product. Lets put it this way, you computer might be in need of some costly upgrades if its older than 3 years and you want to use this product. Bottom line, I really like this product a lot and its very easy to use.
"Steep learning curve", I agree with other reviews here that this is about the best under $100 package for editing video. I've had my quibbles in the past with Ulead over their customer support, and I can't say if that's better now. It's been years since I called them (I stopped buying their software, essentially). But this software runs without freezing my PC, it works well, and it's got most of the bells and whistles. The only thing I'll warn you about is that this is definitely not an intuitive process (editing video, that is). Or maybe it's just me. However, you really need to get in there and start fooling around with this software to see what it can and can't do. With a single video track, you're going to have to leanr how to use their overlay track if you want to make your videos look professional. It's a steep learning curve for the novice, but once you play with this for a while, the curve with flatten out considerable... A quick tip I found helpful -- the voice and music tracks will both work for MP3's, so you can use both tracks and cross fade your music for those long nature videos you like to make. All in all, I'd recommend this software, although I'd also recommend you pick up a book or two on video editing...
"Works for me", I started with Roxio software that came with my TDK DVD burner. It worked fine, but it didn't seem to have the flexibility I wanted for high quality in and output. So I picked up VideoStudo 7 [...]. I might add that you can download a fully funcional trial version if you like. I did, and it worked fine. I used it while waiting for my [...] order to arrive. Of course, it's large, so only do it if you have high speed DSL. I have had no difficulty with it. I had the fairly humble goal of transfering my family movies from tape before they deteriorated. I've archived two family movies already, transfering them through our Sony Digital8 TRV120 camera. The first DVD I did was originally filmed on the digital camera, and the quality was excellent. I ran everything at maximum quality, minimum compression. On the second, I copied an older tape originally filmed on an analog Sony 8 mm camera. The quality again was good--no loss from the tape itself, I don't think. Imagine the relief of getting those memories preserved--now copied multiple times and archived in safe places. As you can tell, I am no expert on these things. I figure if you have good hardware and are reasonably smart, the rest should be easy. It was. The software is fairly intuitive. I only checked the manual a couple of times for reference. If your system is powerful enough and you have the patience to play with it, you should be fine. It hung up on me once or twice, but only when I tried to ask it to do something stupid in the middle of another function. I can't say it has ever acted weird on me when I have not acted weird on it. I'm using a Dell 600 notebook with 1 Gig of RAM and a 1.4 Pentium processor. I have 40 Gig of space on my D drive, but I also got an extra 80 Gig external drive. I think you'll find ample hard drive space and plenty of RAM to both be important. I really wouldn't want to play with this at the minimum specs the software claims.
Read this reviews before You buy..."Absolutely baffling", I spent more than 50 hours trying to learn how to use this product and learning how to work around its bugs. I gave up and bought Sony Screenblast, which is working quite well for me. Here are some problems I had with the Ulead product: The user interface is wildly non-intuitive. Absolutely baffling. Even after 50 hours of intensive effort, I couldn't figure out its behaviors. Also, the help system was clearly tacked on as an afterthought; it's in Adobe PDF format, so you can't search it, it's hard to read, and the index is laughable. The text is completely inadequate. If you buy this product you will have to use the online web boards (which are actually quite good) to figure out how to use it. They say you can import media and edit it, but this is not actually true. It will edit mpegs captured by other tools, but when you try to burn a DVD it crashes with no diagnostics. A phone call to tech support established that you cannot render a file unless it was captured by VS (Video Studio). (There is a workaround, but the tech support guy didn't know about it.) The output audio is bad, with occasional clicks and pops inserted. On a larger project, it gets horrendously slow. (Other programs, like Screenblast, are slow to load but are quite quick once loaded.) I had one crash, after which VS was no longer able to start. I tried to uninstall so I could re-install, but that caused system errors. Fortunately the original installsheild .exe could uninstall. But this one crash cost me half a day of experimentation just to find the way to re-install. The feature set is not very rich compared to Screenblast at about the same price. I've also used ArcSoft ShowBiz, which has a lovely interface but cannot render acceptable output. And I've also used a few really low-end tools. Overall, the money I spent on VS was money flushed down the toilet. And my weeks of work were wasted -- I should have quit earlier. BTW, I have a degree in Computer Science from U.C. Berkeley and have been in the software development business for 20 years, so I'm not easily intimidated by software.
"At least it's stable", This software, unlike the many titles out there will not crash your system! That's about the only benefit I can think of. This program is not user friendly--in fact it appears to do everything in its power to exasperate, exhaust, annoy, enrage, and otherwise destroy the weary, bleary eyed user whose humble goal is to produce a watchable DVD of home videos. It might be a humble goal, but as I've found it isn't for the faint of heart. Videostudio is supposed to take you from capture to burn with nary a hassle, BUT after about three days of wrestling with the program the DVD I did burn was mysteriously missing half the tape filmed, and was terribly glitchy. I would like to have searched the help file for a little instruction, but the help file was in a cumbersome PDF formula and frankly it wasn't much help. Overlaying titles was a HUGE pain. I could find no way to standardize the font and effects across the board, so for every title I had to re-enter the information. The same goes for the chapter headings. Also, inserting bookmarks for chapters was more torture than any human, aside from Saddam Hussien, should be subjected to. Instead of allowing you to pick scenes from the scene changes you've already established you had to use a slide bar that was so sensitive the slightest touch catapults you 15 minutes past your target scene! There are many other problems with this program--it's very cumbersome, not easy to figure out, and involves for to many steps for most tasks. Pinnacle is much easier to use, but it's so glitchy you can't run it for more than five minutes without crashing your system. I'm still looking for a servicable program to burn my video to DVD that won't land me in some sort of asylum.
"Interesting Product...", This product, while slightly expensive, is one of the better options out there. I have used ArcSoft Showbiz, Windows Movie Maker, and MGI Videowave. This software is quite comparable with them. While you'll need a big hard drive to store all those movies (4 minutes=875 mb or more), it is quite easy to use. No frames are dropped {I use a Canon camcorder and Firewire (IEEE1394)}. I have not yet explored the VCD end of the software, but I suppose it works well. Adding audio is a snap, and there really isn't much you can't do with this. One thing, however: you can't take the audio track off and make an audio CD out of it. I have yet to find the software to do this...
"Sneak preview", When it comes to user friendly video editing software these folks have done it well. This version especially is exceptional and fits any and all video editing needs.
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