Video Plus



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Trimming your video.

Get right to the good stuff with Adobe Spark Video’s trimming tool. Upload content to your Adobe Spark Video workspace, and a trimming screen will pop up. Trim from either the beginning or end of your video and insert the clip when you’re done. With the easy-to-use trimming tool on Adobe Spark Video, you can edit down your clips to just the right length to showcase your star footage. Trim at any point in the editing process with the freedom to go back and revise your trimming choices.

Resizing your video.

Adding music to your video.

When it comes to creating impactful videos, good music choices are essential. Adobe Spark Video’s intuitive interface empowers you to add the perfect melodies to your movie. When you’re ready to add music, hit the “Music” icon. You have the option to choose from your files, iTunes library, or pick from Adobe Spark’s stock selection for the perfect track.

Creating video slideshows.

Adobe Spark Video offers a free online slideshow maker with music and transition effects. Use this picture slideshow maker to compose a unique presentation by adding different backgrounds, photos, videos, and voice content. Play around with a variety of customization options to create something your audience has never seen before. Templates, themes, and fonts come in an assortment of styles to suit your creative vision. Upload your images and video clips, or insert free photos and icons from the stock library. Top it off with music for a fun-filled slideshow you’ll want to share with friends and family.

How to edit videos with Adobe Spark Video.

Click the plus button in Adobe Spark, then select “Video” to launch a new project in the video editor. Give your video a name to get started, then dive into the video editing. You can watch the brief tutorial on editing videos or skip straight to adding your content to slides.
Click the plus icon on the slide to add video clips, photos, text, or icons. It’s simple to import media from your photo library or cloud-based storage. You can also select from the free stock photos and icons available in Adobe Spark Video. Once your media is in the slide, you can easily edit individual videos for length. You can drag and drop to reorder slides at any time.
Ready-made slide layouts take the design work off your hands. Click through your options in the app’s video editor toolbar to experiment with layout styles. You can choose different layouts for each slide. Mix it up with a blend of split-screen, single caption, title and text, and full-screen designs to keep your audience engaged.
Tap the plus button or a caption box to add descriptive and compelling text overlays on your video and photos. The split-screen, single caption, title, and text layouts all allow for text over your images. Click and hold the microphone button to use the voice narration feature.
Themes dictate how one slide transitions to the next, how media appears in each slide, and how the text enters the slide. The video editor toolbar lets you swap between and preview themes and colors to settle on what best suits your video story. You can even swap out fonts and text color to best convey your message, goal, and video mood.
Music makes everything better, and that includes your video. Clicking the music button in the video editor toolbar gives you access to free tunes available to Adobe Spark Video users. You can also import your tracks to put your personal touch on it or if you’re using the app as a music video editor for YouTube.
Now that your video editing is wrapped, select “Resize” to choose a widescreen or square format to best suit the platform you’ll be sharing it on. Always hit the “Preview” button before sharing your masterpiece. From the app, you can directly share your social platforms, download and save your video, email, embed it, or generate a shareable link.

One-tap social videos with Adobe Spark Post.

What story are you ready to tell? Whatever it is, Adobe Spark’s free video editing software allows you and your brand story to shine. Your followers may think you’ve got a film editing crew on staff. This video editor’s beauty is the simple, intuitive interface and the fact that anyone can use it. And it’s free. There’s no need for complicated timelines or investment in complex video editing software. The pre-formatted story templates are perfect for slideshows, teaser videos, explainer videos, lesson plan videos, campaign videos, recap videos, promo videos, as a music video editor, and so much more.

Customize your video and impress your audience.

VCR Plus+, G-Code, VideoPlus+ and ShowView are different names for the same scheduling system for programming video recorders. These names are all registered trademarks of Macrovision, whose corporate predecessor, Gemstar, developed these algorithms for use in integrated endecs.

History[edit]

Video Plus Sound

A full view of a typical vacuum fluorescent display (VFD) used in a videocassette recorder

Before the advent of on-screen displays, the only interface available for programming a home video recorder was a small VFD, LED or LCD panel and a small number of buttons. Correctly setting up a recording for a specific program was therefore a somewhat complex operation for many people. G-Code, VideoPlus+ and ShowView were introduced in the late 1980s to remove this difficulty.

Concept[edit]

The central concept of the system is a unique number, a PlusCode, assigned to each program, and published in television listings in newspapers and magazines (such as TV Guide). To record a program, the code number is taken from the newspaper and input into the video recorder, which would then record on the correct channel at the correct time. The number is generated by an algorithm from the date, time and channel of the program; as a result, it does not rely on an over-the-air channel to serve as a conduit to ensure the recording is properly timed. This means it will not compensate for a disrupted schedule due to live sporting events or bulletins for breaking news events, however many video recorders with these systems also incorporate Programme Delivery Control (PDC) and use that to alter times if possible.

Video plus in san rafael

Branding[edit]

A Panasonic late-model VCR Omnivision Stereo 4-Head which supports VCRPlus+

The system has been licensed to television and VCR manufacturers in about 40 countries, but is branded under different names depending on the country. It is known as VCR Plus+, VCR Plus+ Silver and VCR Plus+ Gold in the United States and Canada; G-Code in Japan, China, New Zealand and Australia; VideoPlus+ in Ireland the United Kingdom and Japan; and ShowView in the rest of Europe as well as in South Africa. The system is branded as VideoPlus+/ShowView in Europe due to an existing trademark registration for 'VCR' by Philips in that continent, and as G-Code (the 'G' standing for the system's developer Gemstar) in Japan because VCR is not a common abbreviation there ('VTR,' for videotape recorder, is used instead). Japan initially used the name Video Plus+ and later changed to G-Code, an example of this is the Victor (JVC) HR-880. Because television programming schedules are different, the coding has to be adjusted in each of the regions and recording equipment is not interchangeable.

Algorithms[edit]

The actual algorithms used to encode and decode the television guide values from and to their time representations were published in 1992, but only for six-digit codes or less.[1][2]

Source code for seven and eight digit codes was written in C and Perl and posted anonymously in 2003.[3]

See also[edit]

  • TrueCookPlus, a similar system for microwave oven cooking

References[edit]

Photo Video Plus

  1. ^http://www.righto.com/papers/vcr.html
  2. ^K. Shirriff, C. Welch, A. Kinsman, Decoding a VCR Controller Code, Cryptologia, 16(3), July 1992, pp 227-234.
  3. ^https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/VCRPlus+/
Video plus model railroader

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Video_recorder_scheduling_code&oldid=965278483'