you’ll need to capture the footage. Get on windows movie maker, can capture the footage. when you’re finished, you can save it as a movie file, then upload it to youtube
Your camera should have come with a software disc to load onto your computer this program should recognizes your camera.Then you can upload your videos to the computer.
I want to host news bits/interviews for my web site. I’m trained in film and video and I write well but I haven’t done on-camera. I notice actors/hosts/newscasters have a deliberate way of speaking that’s very different from everyday speech but can’t exactly put my finger on it.
If you connected the cable in the right places on your computer and your camera, you either need the software that came on a CD or DVD bundled with the camera, or you need to download the device driver from the manufacturer of the camera – look it up in google. So if for example your camera is a Kodak CX6330, then look up “Kodak CX6330 driver”.
Many “computer hobbyists” simply wrote their own programs when there was nothing available to do the job. They shared these programs with other enthusiasts freely. The terms “freeware” and “shareware” were loosely used to distinguish them from commercial programs.
Appearing in an episode of Horizon titled Psychedelic Science originally broadcast 5 April, 1998, Bob Wallace said the idea for shareware came to him “to some extent as a result of my psychedelic experience.
VLC – the ultimate multimedia viewer, it can handle most of the modern formats and codecs you’ll encounter out there. Its definitely a must have.
Handbrake – DVD to MPEG-4, handy for the modern mobile video user out there.
Flip4Mac – to deal with .WMV on a Mac
FireFox – because not every web site author checks their site against Safari.
Delicious Library 2 – If you have a lot of DVDs, an incredible way to keep a digital track of them. I guess not essential, but I’ve passed your “top 5″ at this point, so just throwing this out there as a good one to keep around.
File, a database program, calling it user-supported software. Not much later, Bob Wallace produced PC-Write, a word processor, and called it shareware.
GIMP – need some photo editing beyond iPhoto, but don’t want to pay for Photoshop, try this.
The term “shareware” predates the IBM PC. In the early days of personal computers (late 70’s) there were few programs available.
Popular Usage: In 1982, Andrew Fluegelman created a program for the IBM PC called PC-Talk, a telecommunications program, he used the term freeware. About the same time, Jim “Button” Knopf released PC-
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