Synopses & Reviews
Videographers can harness the potential that WM9 offers to deliver high-quality video and multimedia via DVD and over the Internet. Illustrated examples and tutorials demonstrate the basic functionality of WM9 as well as the options available to advanced users who wish to design new applications with the software development kit. Professional videographers will find this book to be a practical way to learn how to set up players, encoders, and servers and how to capture and compress video so they can use WM9 with the applications they use every day, including Powerpoint, Premiere, After Effects, and Avid.
Get insights on how to most effectively set up the Windows Media 9 Series player, encoder, and server, plus tutorials on using established programs and peripheral devices to create, import, and output WM9 files, and much more.
Synopsis
Deliver high-quality video and multimedia via DVD and the Internet. Illustrated examples and tutorials demonstrate the basic functionality of Windows Media 9 including how to set up players, encoders, and servers, and how to capture and compress video. Learn how to use WM 9 with PowerPoint, Premiere, After Effect, and Avid, and design new applications with the SDK.
Synopsis
Deliver a first-class presentation to your Web, home theater, and desktop video audience with proven strategies for reliable performance and positive user experiences. Culled from a decade of professional software development experience, these illustrate
Get insights on how to most effectively set up the Windows Media 9 Series player, encoder, and server, plus tutorials on using established programs and peripheral devices to create, import, and output WM9 files, and much more.
About the Author
Nels Johnson is president of Download Recordings, Inc., a desktop media consulting and production company, and has taught desktop video and multimedia at the University of California and College of Marin. He is the author of How to Digitize Video, Web Developer's Guide to Multimedia and Video, and Web Developer's Guide to Multicasting, as well as a contributing editor and feature writer for DV magazine. Mr. Johnson served on the independent team (the San Francisco Canyon Company) that developed the original version of QuickTime for Windows for Apple Computer.