You can have the sound that is embedded in the video and music/audio/narration on the Audio/Music track. But, there are not two individual Audio/Music tracks if that is what you are asking about.
Is this windows movie maker or windows live movie maker. The two are both from Microsoft and both free, plus they operate differently from one another. http://themystified.com - great site for funny stuff and movie news
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Sony Vegas and Windows Movie Maker are two different video editing software applications. You can't import a Sony Vegas project file into Windows Movie Maker (or vice-versa).However, once the Sony Vegas video is exported to a Standard file format that is compatible with Windows Movie Maker it can be imported.You can import files with the following file name extensions into Windows Movie Maker to use in your project:Video files: .asf, .avi, dvr-ms, .m1v, .mp2, .mp2v, .mpe, .mpeg, .mpg, .mpv2, .wm, .wmv
There are three versions of Windows Movie Maker:Windows Movie Maker v2.1 (for Windows XP)Windows Movie Maker v2.6 (for Vista/7)Windows Live Movie Maker (Vista/7 Support only)The only differences between versions are add-on features and OS dependency.
Open Window DVD Maker twice, first rip both movies from the original, insert recordable DVD start burn in one, and watch in the other.
You can't have more than one clip in use at a time on the Video track in Windows Movie Maker.
That can't be done in Windows Movie Maker. You need more sophisticated software for that.
Unfortunately, Windows Movie Maker is a very basic video editing software application with limited features and functionality. There are only two lines of text allowed.
Split the movie in half using the Split feature. Delete the latter portion, then Publish/Finish it. Then import the movie again. Split it once more (in the same spot as before) then delete the first portion. Publish/Finish the remaining video.Voila... the whole movie is exported in two distinct sections.
That can't be done in Windows Movie Maker. Other (purchased) video editing applications offer that type of feature, but not Windows Movie Maker.
Because if you do it like that you will not buy theirs and it help them not to get profit.
No. There is only one audio track to work with in Windows Movie Maker. You can drag an audio backwards on the time-line to overlap the music... but it may not sound the way it would if it were on two different tracks. Perhaps you can try to use a streaming audio recorder to record audio on windows movie maker.