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A PhotoBooth movie can be dragged by it's thumbnail image from the bottom of the PhotoBooth window out of PhotoBooth on to the Desktop and then can be dragged into an Event in iMovie's Event Library. Or you can drag it directly into the iMovie Event Library if you do not want a copy on the Desktop.
The camera will mount on the desktop as a USB drive. The videos can be imported directly into iMovie (assuming it is a fairly recent version). You should probably avoid recording video in the WVGA format which is not iMovie friendly and will need converting.
You can only have 2 video tracks in iMovie 08-11. There is only one video track in iMovie 06 and lower. Though, you can still apply effects like aged film without taking a video track.
export it from imovie, and you can import to imovie from file
iMovie just supports such popular video formats as DV, HDV, MPEG-4, MPEG-2, MOV, and AVCHD.1. So if you have some video files can't import to imovie, you need use Video Converter for Mac to convert them to .mp4 format that imovie supports.
The Google Earth tour video has to be formatted for iMovie - DV (Digital Video) stream.
Reel director,iMovie,and iMovie extras but you need wifi for the iMovie extras.
Honestly, the direct upload from iMovie is not the best thing to do. It is better to export the video file and upload it directly.
Yes, they definitely are. Anything you can open in QuickTime is compatible with iMovie
The Samsung F40 will mount a disk image on the desktop when connected to a Mac. You double click the disk icon and then the video folder. The video files can then be dragged into iMovie (or wherever you want them) for editing/sharing etc.
Use any online or desktop video converter. Online converters are free, so it's better and quicker to use them. For example, Online Video Converter, Zamzar, Online-Convert, Clipchamp Converter and so on. Just google and choose any of them.
Yes.....................