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I have not had a chance to figure out how to check the driver for the speaker, as I was dealing with the crashed hard drive issue. Now that I got that resolved, I started editing a new video with videos from a different source. I am not having that "pop" issue at all so far. Maybe it was just a funy thing? But I intend to get back tot he video wthat was giing me the issue in a few days. I will let you know how it goes.
Jcardana, Boot Camp is a program that creates a partition so you can load another OS onto a Mac, so there is nothing about Mac software or or anything that could afect this. The point is that the laptop is only 3 years old and it's of rather good quality, so I don;t think the pops have anything to do with the speaker hardware.
I am using Windows 7 in Boot Camp on a MacBook Pro from 2012.I tried tooling around with the sample video and pictures and a few videos from my files. I found that the samples provicded by Cyberlink did not "pop," but all my videos did, regardless of where in the video I edited them, but only on the soundtrack (If I were, for instace, to separate the video from the sound and give them different starting points, the pop would come on the sound).

Then my external hard drive stopped working and I am scanning for recoverable deleted files on my computer that may replace what I have lost, so I don;t want to render any footage or create any new files until that is done.

to be continued...
Terrific. Thanks
Thanks, but this has absolutely nothing to do with the camera. The "start of the clips" to which I am referring are the clips in the timeline. I can trim them to any length, from either direction, at any point in the original file, and every single one pops at the start every time. Even the music track pops at the beginning of each clip. This never happened in Adobe premiere or windows Movie Maker.
WEll, I rendered the video and yes, the "pops" are still audible. They are at the start of every clip, be it a video or audio clip. What is that and how do I stop it?
Thanks! Does it matter if I use Mpeg, AVI, Windows Media, etc?
I am making a feature-length documentary to be sold as a DVD, and the source videos come from several different cameras. Some of the clips are 4:3 standard def (from a 6.1 megapixel digital camera set at "640") and most are hi-def widescreen (1920 x 1080). I have decided to have some of the 4:3 footage in a "reverse leterbox" (black on the sides) and some expanded to fill the widescreen (cropping off the top and bottom).



What is the best setting at which to produce my product? Should I set the resolution at standard def to match the lowest def footage (an army moves as ast as its slowest unit) or set it to match the highest def, and simply acept that the standard-def video may not lok as good? How bad could it possiby look?
I am editing only my third video in PD13, and the first two had a lot of loud sounds and music, so I probably didn't notice this before, but now it seems that at the start of every clip there is an audible "pop." I get the same "pop" when I place the timeline slider on a clip and press "play." I don't get the same pop when I place the slider in blank space between clips or if I pause the play and then hit play again.

Is this just an annoying thing that is a part of the editing program and it won't appear in the final video, or is there something I have to do the make sure it is not heard in the final video?
That's a quality tip. Thanks!
I don't know what a "color board" is yet, but the process seems like a rather complex workaround.simply togling between a few frames to figure out there the sound is was pretty easy.

Well, I guess that will be my request for the PD14!



Thanks. Hopefully the other conveniences and improvements over Adobe Premiere will be worth this one inconvenience.
Hey! That's great! I never knew about "timeline markers" before! That will help me because a particular clip at the end of my project keeps slipping as I edit clips in the middle of the project, and I am trying to keep it in place with a piece of music (now that I think of it, I should have just "grouped" the clip with the music). Having a marker at the particular beat of the music that I am working with will help a lot! Thanks!
I am trying to set an edit at the exact moment when a certain sound occurs, but when I go frame-by-frame, I don't hear the sound. Is there any way to hear the sound when moving frame-by-frame?
Thanks for getting back to me. Yes, the pause button does stop the sider as it is playing, but when I click on a clip, the slider then jumps to the start of the clip. I want the slider to stay where it is when I pause it so that I can move clips in relation to it.
I am coming to PD13 from Adobe Premiere cs3. A little outdated, I know, but I was used to it. One of the things I was used to was the timeline slider staying in place once you stopped it somewhere. I could then drag clips to it, use it as a guide to shorten or lengthen clips, and I could even use it when draging a clip so that one point on a clip would synch up with a specific point on another clip. On PD13, however, the timeline slider jumps to the front of whatever clip I click on, so it's dificult to be precise when pushing clips around. How can I get the timeline slider to stay where it is when I want it to?
Thanks for your reply. Locking the track! Something I never did before!



[edit] That worked! Thank you!
I am splitting clips on my timeline, and when I do so, sometimes it also also splits the music track, and sometimes it doesn't. I don't want to do that, I want the music track to be intact. How can Ibe sure that when I split clips I do not also split the music track, or for that matter, any other clips that might be on other tracks?
Thans, folks. There were, like, 25 or so gaps that I wanted to delete. I wound up dong them one-by-one, as you said. I thought maybe you might be able so "shift-cllick" multiple gaps, as you can clips, but no luck.

I must say that I am pleased so far with the function of "delete a gap" because it saves the time and headache of making sure you grab all the clips to move them at once to fill a gap, then realizing many steps later that a sound track is now out of synch because you failed to grap it when you moved everything, and other issues. It is one of several shortcuts and conveniences that PD13 has over Adobe Premiere CS3 (which is what I had ben using)
I dropped a bunch of clips onto my timeline with gaps between them for editing purposes. I wanted to kep theme separate for he way I was editing them. I now want to delete all the empty gaps n the timeline between them. I found out how to do it one gap at a time, but is there a way to delete all the gaps at once?
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