Tim (Surfbits) on December 29th, 2012

I have found that our Mac Community can sometimes overlook other solid technology in favor of our solid Apple technology. Case in point, the Apple iPhone and the Samsung Galaxy smart phone. We all love our iPhones, but the Samsung Galaxy smartphone made many heads turn of late and with good reason. For that reason, [...]

Continue reading about (Sponsored Video) Share Quality Photos with Galaxy Camera

Tim (Surfbits) on April 5th, 2011

Hi everyone Gazmaz from the UK here. This week I’m reviewing a video Application available from the Mac App Store called Elasty. Elasty is a video editing application that allows you to make adjustments like rotation, flipping and cropping, it also allows you to remove camera shake using a stabilization feature. There’s a tracking functionality [...]

Continue reading about Elasty Video Editor: Your Movie Toolbox

Tim (Surfbits) on November 11th, 2009

Allison Sheridan of the NosillaCast podcast here, hosted at podfeet.com.

Every once in a while I get a product to review that I really struggle with. It’s not that the product necessarily has anything wrong with it, but sometimes I just don’t see the point of all the things it can do. Maybe it’s that I don’t personally have a need for what it can do, or perhaps it really doesn’t have unique functionality – it’s hard to tell. This is one of those reviews.

The product that I’m giving such a difficult intro to is Popcorn from roxio.com. Now Roxio is a household name, well known for their quality products, like Toast for burning DVDs. Popcorn is a multi-faceted tool that has lots of distinctly different capabilities.

Popcorn can help you convert non-copy protected DVD movies to play on your iPhone, iPod, AppleTV, Playstation, Xbox, PSP, Blackberry, Palm, YouTube…the list goes on and on. So insert a DVD, it shows up in the main convert tab, and gives you some options on what you want to convert to. You can even schedule the conversion for a specific time, which is pretty cool. It’s going to take some time to get this done so you could set it to start after you left for work and when you got home it would be all done.
popcorn dvd convert tab
popcorn convert options

There have been various freeware programs to do this over the years, like the discontinued VisualHub and iSquint. Since those freeware programs have been around, I’m not sure this capability would merit the cost of Popcorn. One thing that might make it worth the price is that Roxio teamed up with Elgato so Popcorn will let you use Elgato’s Turbo.h264 to speed up your encoding. if you haven’t seen it, is an oversized thumb drive looking thing that actually is a hardware accelerator designed specifically to offload encoding from your computer’s cpu to this dedicated processor. I tried it out and it worked, at least I think it did – hard to tell unless you encode an entire DVD twice, once with and once without! It went pretty fast so I’m pretty confident it works as advertised.

The documentation for Popcorn said that you can also extract video clips from your non-copy protected DVDs. I was excited at the idea of extracting video clips from the home movie DVDs Steve so laboriously created for us and sending them up to Youtube. We have a hilarious clip of Lindsay when she was wee tiny dancing to my brother playing base, and I’ve wanted to pull that video out without having to work on the whole disk. I read the help file that came with Popcorn and while it does say you can extract video clips, it doesn’t tell you how. This is kind of a theme with Popcorn – the documentation that comes with it is great about telling you what you can do, but many things have no how.

I went online to the support section at roxio.com and I found the detailed instructions on how to do the extraction, but guess what? It won’t work on the DVDs Steve made using iMovie. His movies always have chapters and music and scene selections and all that, so I was really disappointed to find that Popcorn did not recognize the chapter markers, but instead saw the DVD as one giant file. Now they’re very clear throughout the documentation that they can only work on non-copy protected DVDs, and since this application was made for a Mac, it would make sense if it could recognize the chapters made by the Mac software iDVD. In a few other areas of the documentation they say they support iDVD but this is clearly not always the case.

Popcorn will create a disk image of your DVDs so you can do things like back them up to a hard drive, maybe hook it to a hacked AppleTV to play, that sort of thing. The functionality works exactly as advertised on Popcorn, but again this is something you don’t have to pay for – it’s built into the Apple Disk Utility. I argued this with research assistant Niraj and he brought up a good point – some people don’t want to go poking around in a bunch of different freeware programs, they want it all in one place and they want it to look pretty and be intuitive. That might be the real selling point for Popcorn because it does take some fiddling to figure out how to use the free tools. Popcorn has easy to follow menus that look very pretty and mac-like so it’s a more pleasant experience.

I’ve been experimenting recently with tools that will allow you to capture content from Tivo, bring it down to the Mac to play it, or convert it to use on a portable media player like an iPod, iPhone, or PSP. I tested out iTivo but it was far to flaky to recommend. Roxio’s press release said that Popcorn could transfer using TivoToGo to transfer from Tivo DVRs to watch on the computer, burn to a DVD, or convert for iPod or PSP, so this was worth a try.

Now this was considered an “Extra” feature but was actually the one that interested me most. It actually launches a separate program called TiVo Transfer, but it does it in a way that makes you feel like you’re still in one program. You have to find the IP address of your TiVo and the Media Access Key for the device and plug it into TiVo Transfer but they tell you how to find that before you get started. Next up TiVo Transfer shows you a list of your recorded shows. Select the ones you want to transfer, choose what format you want them in, and you’re off to the races.
tivo transfer window

Unfortunately some of my content was copy protected, which really irritated me, especially when I discovered that my CNET podcasts recorded via TiVo were copy protected! I wrote to Tom Merritt about this and he wrote back telling me that he and Molly Wood have complained like crazy about this to their bosses and haven’t been able to get it changed but he was going to forward my letter on to them to see if one more letter would break them. Seems so counterintuitive to have a freely available podcast in so many forms and then copy protect it when it gets to TiVo.

The help file in Popcorn also says you can transfer standard and HD video from your Mac to your TiVo but for the life of me I couldn’t find the menu choice that showed me how to do that. I found in a lot of cases the documentation told you what you could do, but now how to do it.

With Popcorn you can combine a set of movie files into one disk image that you can burn as a DVD or just play from your desktop. I took a bunch of little videos with my iPhone on Halloween of Steve and Ron carving their pumpkins but I made one big mistake – I took them all with the iPhone vertical instead of horizontal. Steve has been working on how to import them into iMovie HD and it’s been a bear of a problem to get the letterboxing right on them.

I used the Copy tab of Popcorn and clicked on DVD-Video and it allowed me to drag in my multiple video files, choose a menu style for each chapter and even mess with encoding if I wanted, which I most definitely did not want to do! You can lose days of your life if you start fiddling with encoding options and in my personal experience you end up back with the standard settings in the end game!
to combine videos

The interface is fantastic for this process – after you drag in your video clips and even photos for a little slideshow in the video, you can walk through each clip and name it as a separate chapter for the movie. they have a tab so you can do a quick review of the clip so you can remember why it was worthy of inclusion in your video before you name it. When you’re done setting things up, you can choose to burn it directly to a DVD, or make a disk image of it first. I recommend the disk image option because you can always burn from there using Popcorn or Disk Utility, but you don’t waste the time and materials making a physical DVD before you know if you’ve got everything just right!

I’m sad to report that after all my painstaking work to create each chapter for the DVD naming each clip, when Popcorn was done creating the DVD disk image, there were no chapters at all, not even an opening menu screen when I opened it using Apple’s DVD player. I tried opening it with the Toast DVD player that comes with Popcorn, and while it showed me the opening menu screen, I couldn’t select any of the items to play.

Remember at the beginning of this review I told you I wasn’t sure where it would go? I went back and forth throughout the review sometimes liking it sometimes being aggravated, and in the end game I have to recommend a pass on Popcorn. Video clip extraction from videos created with iDVD failed, and creation of a chapter-filled DVD from video clips failed. Many of the features like creating a disk image of a DVD are already built into OSX. the only feature that worked well for me and wasn’t already freely available was the TiVo Transfer, but $50 for Popcorn is too much to pay for this features.

Thanks Tim, we’ll talk to you again soon.

Allison Sheridan of the NosillaCast podcast here, hosted at podfeet.com.

Every once in a while I get a product to review that I really struggle with. It’s not that the product necessarily has anything wrong with it, but sometimes I just don’t see the point of all the things it can do. Maybe it’s that I don’t personally have a need for what it can do, or perhaps it really doesn’t have unique functionality – it’s hard to tell. This is one of those reviews.

The product that I’m giving such a difficult intro to is Popcorn from roxio.com. Now Roxio is a household name, well known for their quality products, like Toast for burning DVDs. Popcorn is a multi-faceted tool that has lots of distinctly different capabilities.

Popcorn can help you convert non-copy protected DVD movies to play on your iPhone, iPod, AppleTV, Playstation, Xbox, PSP, Blackberry, Palm, YouTube…the list goes on and on. So insert a DVD, it shows up in the main convert tab, and gives you some options on what you want to convert to. You can even schedule the conversion for a specific time, which is pretty cool. It’s going to take some time to get this done so you could set it to start after you left for work and when you got home it would be all done.
popcorn dvd convert tab
popcorn convert options

There have been various freeware programs to do this over the years, like the discontinued VisualHub and iSquint. Since those freeware programs have been around, I’m not sure this capability would merit the cost of Popcorn. One thing that might make it worth the price is that Roxio teamed up with Elgato so Popcorn will let you use Elgato’s Turbo.h264 to speed up your encoding. if you haven’t seen it, is an oversized thumb drive looking thing that actually is a hardware accelerator designed specifically to offload encoding from your computer’s cpu to this dedicated processor. I tried it out and it worked, at least I think it did – hard to tell unless you encode an entire DVD twice, once with and once without! It went pretty fast so I’m pretty confident it works as advertised.

The documentation for Popcorn said that you can also extract video clips from your non-copy protected DVDs. I was excited at the idea of extracting video clips from the home movie DVDs Steve so laboriously created for us and sending them up to Youtube. We have a hilarious clip of Lindsay when she was wee tiny dancing to my brother playing base, and I’ve wanted to pull that video out without having to work on the whole disk. I read the help file that came with Popcorn and while it does say you can extract video clips, it doesn’t tell you how. This is kind of a theme with Popcorn – the documentation that comes with it is great about telling you what you can do, but many things have no how.

I went online to the support section at roxio.com and I found the detailed instructions on how to do the extraction, but guess what? It won’t work on the DVDs Steve made using iMovie. His movies always have chapters and music and scene selections and all that, so I was really disappointed to find that Popcorn did not recognize the chapter markers, but instead saw the DVD as one giant file. Now they’re very clear throughout the documentation that they can only work on non-copy protected DVDs, and since this application was made for a Mac, it would make sense if it could recognize the chapters made by the Mac software iDVD. In a few other areas of the documentation they say they support iDVD but this is clearly not always the case.

Popcorn will create a disk image of your DVDs so you can do things like back them up to a hard drive, maybe hook it to a hacked AppleTV to play, that sort of thing. The functionality works exactly as advertised on Popcorn, but again this is something you don’t have to pay for – it’s built into the Apple Disk Utility. I argued this with research assistant Niraj and he brought up a good point – some people don’t want to go poking around in a bunch of different freeware programs, they want it all in one place and they want it to look pretty and be intuitive. That might be the real selling point for Popcorn because it does take some fiddling to figure out how to use the free tools. Popcorn has easy to follow menus that look very pretty and mac-like so it’s a more pleasant experience.

I’ve been experimenting recently with tools that will allow you to capture content from Tivo, bring it down to the Mac to play it, or convert it to use on a portable media player like an iPod, iPhone, or PSP. I tested out iTivo but it was far to flaky to recommend. Roxio’s press release said that Popcorn could transfer using TivoToGo to transfer from Tivo DVRs to watch on the computer, burn to a DVD, or convert for iPod or PSP, so this was worth a try.

Now this was considered an “Extra” feature but was actually the one that interested me most. It actually launches a separate program called TiVo Transfer, but it does it in a way that makes you feel like you’re still in one program. You have to find the IP address of your TiVo and the Media Access Key for the device and plug it into TiVo Transfer but they tell you how to find that before you get started. Next up TiVo Transfer shows you a list of your recorded shows. Select the ones you want to transfer, choose what format you want them in, and you’re off to the races.
tivo transfer window

Unfortunately some of my content was copy protected, which really irritated me, especially when I discovered that my CNET podcasts recorded via TiVo were copy protected! I wrote to Tom Merritt about this and he wrote back telling me that he and Molly Wood have complained like crazy about this to their bosses and haven’t been able to get it changed but he was going to forward my letter on to them to see if one more letter would break them. Seems so counterintuitive to have a freely available podcast in so many forms and then copy protect it when it gets to TiVo.

The help file in Popcorn also says you can transfer standard and HD video from your Mac to your TiVo but for the life of me I couldn’t find the menu choice that showed me how to do that. I found in a lot of cases the documentation told you what you could do, but now how to do it.

With Popcorn you can combine a set of movie files into one disk image that you can burn as a DVD or just play from your desktop. I took a bunch of little videos with my iPhone on Halloween of Steve and Ron carving their pumpkins but I made one big mistake – I took them all with the iPhone vertical instead of horizontal. Steve has been working on how to import them into iMovie HD and it’s been a bear of a problem to get the letterboxing right on them.

I used the Copy tab of Popcorn and clicked on DVD-Video and it allowed me to drag in my multiple video files, choose a menu style for each chapter and even mess with encoding if I wanted, which I most definitely did not want to do! You can lose days of your life if you start fiddling with encoding options and in my personal experience you end up back with the standard settings in the end game!
to combine videos

The interface is fantastic for this process – after you drag in your video clips and even photos for a little slideshow in the video, you can walk through each clip and name it as a separate chapter for the movie. they have a tab so you can do a quick review of the clip so you can remember why it was worthy of inclusion in your video before you name it. When you’re done setting things up, you can choose to burn it directly to a DVD, or make a disk image of it first. I recommend the disk image option because you can always burn from there using Popcorn or Disk Utility, but you don’t waste the time and materials making a physical DVD before you know if you’ve got everything just right!

I’m sad to report that after all my painstaking work to create each chapter for the DVD naming each clip, when Popcorn was done creating the DVD disk image, there were no chapters at all, not even an opening menu screen when I opened it using Apple’s DVD player. I tried opening it with the Toast DVD player that comes with Popcorn, and while it showed me the opening menu screen, I couldn’t select any of the items to play.

Remember at the beginning of this review I told you I wasn’t sure where it would go? I went back and forth throughout the review sometimes liking it sometimes being aggravated, and in the end game I have to recommend a pass on Popcorn. Video clip extraction from videos created with iDVD failed, and creation of a chapter-filled DVD from video clips failed. Many of the features like creating a disk image of a DVD are already built into OSX. the only feature that worked well for me and wasn’t already freely available was the TiVo Transfer, but $50 for Popcorn is too much to pay for this features.

Thanks Tim, we’ll talk to you again soon.

Continue reading about Popcorn from Roxio

Tim (Surfbits) on September 13th, 2009

If you or your company are thinking about creating a screencast from a desktop application or from a Powerpoint/Keynote presentation, even video, please drop me an email at surfbits@gmail.com and I would love to discuss the project with you. Doing a great screencast is not as simple as capturing your desktop movements or animating a presentation, it’s recording and mixing audio with the graphics to create a professional screencast ready for distribution on ipods, AppleTV, YouTube or DVD. No matter how small a project seems to be, it deserves to be done right. Let’s talk about it.

Continue reading about Does Your Company Need Audio or Video Help?

Tim (Surfbits) on June 16th, 2009

Taking video sharing to a new level, the makers of Flip Video today announced the latest version of its onboard FlipShare software that makes sharing personal video easier than ever before. FlipShare now gives users the ability to publish personal video channels online with Flip Channels™, in addition to easy uploading to popular sites like MySpace™ and YouTube™, and one-click private video emailing capabilities.
The innovative new Flip Channels feature enables users to easily share their favorite Flip content with groups of people they designate. Once created, their personal Flip Channels can be instantly viewed online at FlipShare.com or on an iPhone by using the new FlipShare iPhone application, also announced today.

Continue reading about Flip Video™ Introduces Next-Generation Video Sharing Software

Tim (Surfbits) on January 27th, 2009

I have mentioned before how much I love Toast but with Toast 10 Pro they have certainly raised the bar even higher!

The latest version helps greatly enhance and extend Mac OSX and iLife applications with a broad range of additional capabilities for creating, sharing, and enjoying personal digital media content.

Toast 10 Titanium Pro, to give it its full and rather grand name, is the Rolls Royce offering with some rather intriguing third-party applications included over and above the Toast 10 Premium product (see below for full feature list). The Pro version is very much targeted at the advanced user, with a heavy bias on the photo & video enthusiasts, designers and creative people, and …… High Definition and Blu Ray users; as Pro includes a very handy plug in which allows you to authour HD video content on to standard DVDs and Blu-ray Discs.

Continue reading about Roxio Toast Titanium Pro 10

Tim (Surfbits) on January 21st, 2009

One of SoundSoap’s powerful feature is the “learn noise” function which automatically determines the noise contained in a file.  Suprisingly enough it only needs 2 seconds of the background noise to sample to set the Noise Tuner, and Noise Reduction knob automatically.  The Noise Tuner is the threshold, and the Noise Reduction is the amount of reduction applied to the frequencies filtered by the Noise Tuner.  Once noise has been filtered you have an option to listen to the filtered noise only, and adjust the Noise tuner and Reduction.  There are two sliders, one to eliminate clicks and crackles, and another slider labeled “enhance” which can be used to boost frequencies and tone to any degraded media files.

Continue reading about Soundsoap 2: Remove Noise From Digital Media

Tim (Surfbits) on December 11th, 2008

This one was going to be interesting because I wasn’t exactly sure what RoadMovie was for when I started. That wouldn’t stop me though, right? I did some reading on their website and it looks like RoadMovie is designed to allow you to add captions to your movies and also to convert them to h.264 video in some common formats like for the iPhone.

When I downloaded and installed RoadMovie, I launched it and it gave me the option of watching a Quickstart movie. Excellent, that’s just what I need! The bummer was the movie wouldn’t play. I hit that play button about 12 times but it wasn’t having any of that. Oh well, I’ll jump in anyway.

Continue reading about RoadMovie: Video Conversion and More

Tim (Surfbits) on November 21st, 2008

It’s no secret that we love the Flip Video Cams. For a video camera that small, the pictures were very sharp and included sound and basic editing. What could be better then that? How about a tiny little Flip with HD quality video? Welcome the Flip MinoHD.

The Flip MinoHD is the world’s smallest high definition camcorder at just over three oz., this remarkably slim camcorder makes capturing and sharing HD video easy and affordable. The stylish Flip MinoHD from Pure Digital Technologies, priced at $229.99 (MSRP), records up to 60 minutes of HD video and features Flip Video’s new FlipShare software, also announced today. This advanced on-board software platform allows consumers to plug the camcorder’s signature flip-out USB arm into any computer for easy drag-and-drop video organizing, editing and sharing on YouTube, MySpace, AOL Video or via email.

Continue reading about The New Flip MinoHD: Making the Best Better

Tim (Surfbits) on November 12th, 2008

The maker of Flip Video™ – the best-selling family of affordable and simple-to-use digital camcorders – today introduced its latest breakthrough product: the Flip MinoHD. The world’s smallest high definition camcorder at just over three oz., this remarkably slim camcorder makes capturing and sharing HD video easy and affordable. The stylish Flip MinoHD from Pure Digital Technologies, priced at $229.99 (MSRP), records up to 60 minutes of HD video and features Flip Video’s new FlipShare software, also announced today. This advanced on-board software platform allows consumers to plug the camcorder’s signature flip-out USB arm into any computer for easy drag-and-drop video organizing, editing and sharing on YouTube, MySpace, AOL Video or via email.

Continue reading about Pure Digital Introduces Flip MinoHD

Tim (Surfbits) on September 22nd, 2008

If you’ve checked out my show before, you may have figured out that I actually script all of my show up till Chit Chat Across the Pond with Bart Buscchots. I do this for a lot of reasons, not the least of which is that I go through a lot of technical bits that I think up early in the week and have to reproduce brilliantly way out on Sunday night.

Video Cue logoSince I do use a script, I might be the perfect person to test out Videocue 2 from Flip4Mac.com. Videocue was originally developed by Telestra, and they were bought by Flip4Mac. Varasoft is the great company who brought us Screenflow for making video screencasts. This has all the promise of being an application I’ll like.

Continue reading about Videocue 2: Make Yourself Seen and Heard

Tim (Surfbits) on July 3rd, 2008

If you’ve been following this blog for any length of time, you’ll know that I love the Flip Ultra Video camera. A pocket size, hand held video camera that gives you surprisingly sharp images and a nice audio output. How could you improve on a camera like this? Easy, you make it smaller and easier to use. Welcome the Flip Mino.

On first glance, the Mino is much smaller then the Ultra and rather then buttons, it has touch-pad controls, similar to the iPod. It has a few other changes that may excite you or may not, depending on how you use your Flip. Let’s take a closer look at the specifications.

As we mentioned, the first thing you’ll notice is the size. It’s half the depth of the Ultra with a slightly smaller height and width too. You will also be happy to hear that the weight has dropped to 3.3 oz. from the previous 5.2 oz. Some of the weight difference will be attributed to the next big change in the Mino. No longer will you have two AA size batteries to replace in the Flip, the Mino has an internal Lithium-Ion battery that should give you up to 4 hours of use between charges. This seems to be the most controversial change that the new Flip has received.

As of this article, the Mino comes in just the 2 gig model for 60 minutes of recording time and will retail for $179.00, slightly higher then it’s previous model. The colors are black or white only. The LCD screen stays at 1.5 inches and with a resolution of 528 x 132. It shoots 640×480 at 30 fps with a similar fixed focus lens. The only other change can be found in the pause, fast forward and rewind functions added to the Mino.

Using Mino’s built-in software, consumers are able to edit and share videos instantly from a PC or Mac. In addition to quickly posting videos on social networking sites, they can email videos and video greeting cards, create custom movies with their own music, capture still photos from video, save and organize videos on the computer, and new to the Mino, seamlessly order and send DVDs anywhere in the world.

I’ve been using it the last two weeks while I traveled to Michigan and then Seattle on business and I can tell you that the smaller size and weight made a huge difference in carrying it along in a shirt pocket or jacket. It’s so easy to pull it from your pocket and start shooting, I loved the portability. The results were what I expected, similar to the Flip Ultra and the sound seemed to be a little sharper then before. I’ll put some video I shot up on my Smugmug account for your perusal.

I am certain you’ll be able to find the new Flip Mino online at a better price then the MSRP of $179, but even still, I would like to have seen the Mino introduced at a price closer to the $149 price of the Ultra. Other then that little gripe, I see no reason for anyone with a computer, Mac or PC to not have a Flip Mino in their gadget bag. For most of your video needs, the Flip is perfect. It’s my only video camera, and I feel like I’m not missing a thing.

Technorati Tags: mac, video, camera, flip, ultra, mino, portable

Continue reading about You’ll Keep Flipping for the New Mino

Tim (Surfbits) on June 2nd, 2008

ATVFlash is back and better! After it closed down sales last week, it was thought that AppleCore LLC was having trouble with the software it was using in it’s Flash Drive. Of course we remember ATVFlash from a review on the MacReviewCast podcast in March where a listener told us about this great idea of loading all the software on AppleTV that was needed to read and play almost any video and audio format direct from your AppleTV or from your Mac, without iTunes.

Well I just received this email from the listener that reviewed the software, John Long, and here is what AppleCore LLC announced,

Continue reading about ATV Flash is Back and Better!

Tim (Surfbits) on May 1st, 2008

This week I’m going to review a piece of software that is supposed to delight us in its ability to find, download and convert videos and photos from the internet and have them automatically sync into your iTunes and iPhoto. The product is called Web2 Delight from globaldelight.com0

Continue reading about Fill Up That iPod or iPhone Now

Tim (Surfbits) on April 9th, 2008

This is a very simple and easy to understand review. Ready? If you own a Mac and a Playstation 3, you need MediaLink. It’s just that simple.

Continue reading about MediaLink, Plus Mac, Plus PS3 Equals Perfection