Not quite sure, but instead of using the "Share" or whatever it's called function, try exporting it as movie file, and then upload that to wherever it is you're uploading it to.
The Google Earth tour video has to be formatted for iMovie - DV (Digital Video) stream.
Well, you can click edit video and change the speed. You will have to do a voice over since, the audio is in the video.
There are a couple of ways to do it. If the camera is a DV camera, it will have a firewire connector as its digital video output. Older cameras will normally just have an analog video and audio output. First, the computer needs a firewire interface (also known as a 1394 interface) or a video capture card. Many new computers have firewire already installed but few will have an analog video capture card. Both interfaces can be bought as add ons. Once the interface is installed, video capture software is needed to ingest the video signal. Depending on the software package, it will be imported as AVI, for uncompressed storage that is good for editing or MPEG, for archiving with smaller file sizes. Other programs will allow the video to be written direct to a DVD.
Both you and the other person own the video.
Wonderful Wanda says:The .mov file format is not supported by WMM (windows movie maker). You need to convert the file to one of the following formats:.asf, .avi, dvr-ms, .m1v, .mp2, .mp2v, .mpe, .mpeg, .mpg, .mpv2, .wm, and .wmvFree video converters are available online (Simply Google: free video converters)Once you have downloaded a video converter, follow the conversion instructions to convert the .mov file to one of the extensions listed. Be sure to include the extension as the 'output source'.
Yes.Share >> Media Browser >> Select "Medium" >> Publish
If you did not save/finish/publish the Windows Movie Maker project before closing the program, the videos are irretrievable. If you have a 'Saved" project, the video should be in your Collections folder - unless you moved/changed/deleted the original source files on your computer.
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.
You have to have the original source files available to be able to Publish a video in Windows Movie Maker. If they are not available on your computer (for the program to access) then you can't publish the video.
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
You can't do that. You need to have all the original source files used in the project in order to Publish the video.
Yes.....................