Review of YouTube’s New Online Video Editor – WVU #89
A few days ago YouTube released a new online video editor. How does it work and what can you do with it? I show you in this video.
Resources
YouTube Online Video Editor
A few days ago YouTube released a new online video editor. How does it work and what can you do with it? I show you in this video.
Resources
YouTube Online Video Editor
Dave, does YouTube allow you to take someone else’s video and edit it to suit your own purposes for republishing?
@ Dave – I’ve used this video editor and I find it pretty slick for your basic editing. It’s a huge time saver especially if you are a Flip camera user. Just plug in your Flip, upload to YouTube and edit inside of YouTube.
One tip that everyone should keep in mind is to make sure you delete (or set to Private) any unedited videos after you have finished editing and publishing your new video mashup. This will help keep your YouTube channel nice and clean.
@Matt – At the moment, you can only access your own videos (Public or Private) for editing.
Interesting Dave… Not having any brainwaves on using it yet… But it is good to know its there!
Hi,Dave!
I loved the tip.
Thanks.
hi dave,
is the t2i only limited by the size of your sd card size? on the canon site under features:
“Continuous Shooting Time: Approx. 12 min. (1920 x 1080), 18 min. (1280 x 720), 24 min. (640 x 480)
Based on Canon’s testing standards using a 4GB card.”
so based upon canon’s feature list on their site if one has a 32gb card would this allow for 96 min of (1920 x 1080) continuous shooting? what have you experienced to be factual? thanks for any insight as i am considering purchasing the t2i but 12 min limit is undesirable for my purposes. lastly is 32gb cards the largest capacity you have found to date?
kind regards,
@Heath – There are really no recording limitations with any camera…the limitations come from memory cards.
SDHC memory cards, by specification, have a maximum storage size of 32GB. The also have a single, continuous (i.e. one long video) size limitation of 4GB per file. That means if you’re shooting a really long video and it’s size reaches 4GB, the camera automatically continues recording, but to a 2nd new file. This is because SDHC cards use a FAT32 file system, where 4GB is the maximum size of any single file.
Again, these limitations are strictly due to the SDHC format and have nothing to do with a camera (whether it be a T2i or any other brand/model).
If you want a bigger card, you have to use the new SDXC memory cards, which based on specs, can hold up to 2TB. However, the largest SDXC memory cards currently available are 64GB…and these cards with speeds fast enough for video (Class 6 or higher) run around $500. By the way, the T2i accepts both SDHC and SDXC memory cards.
And yes, you simply multiply Canon’s specs per the storage limits of your memory cards. If a 4GB card can hold 12 minutes of video, then a 32GB card can hold 96 minutes of video. They are not pulling a “fast one”, it’s just math.
thanks dave. i ran into the fat32 file system issue with my external hard drives a while back and had to learn the hard way to make sure to use ntfs file system external hard drives due to the 4gb file limitation. wish sd cards were made standard with the ntfs file system for us who shoot longer videos. as usual technology will adapt over time to the demands of the industry. thanks for your valuable input.
best,