Vsdc Manual Pdf
Audacity Manual Contents. From Audacity Development Manual. Jump to: navigation, search. Audacity 2.3.0 Manual New features in this release. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) - most common questions are answered in the FAQ. The latest Tweets from VSDC Guide Download (@VsdcGuide). Here's how to get the PDF download for the instructions on how to use VSDC Free Video Editor. Help A user manual intended to provide you with the detailed description of the program with the focus on the interface and all the functions. VSDC Video Editor Help is available for download in the.pdf format only to registered users of the Pro version.
- Pros
Inexpensive; free version available. Supports 4K editing and output. Decent PiP, chroma-key, and transparency tools. Lots of file format support. Small install size.
- Cons
Awkward interface. Can't play preview in the timeline editor. No multi-cam, motion tracking, or 3D support. No Help feature. Occasionally unstable in testing.
- Bottom Line
If you really don't want to pay much for video editing software, VSDC Video Editor can do a decent amount with your clips, but top products are far easier to use, more stable, and more powerful.
If you just want simple video stitching and trimming, you may not want to spend close to $100 for an enthusiast-level application like CyberLink's PowerDirector. Unfortunately, if you choose a low-cost option such as VSDC Video Editor Pro (which costs just $19.99), you may get frustrated when using it. Although it does have some fairly advanced video editing tools, VSDC is one of the least user-friendly applications I've tested in a while.
- $99.99
- $129.99
- $99.99
- $129.99
- $79.99
- $299.99
Pricing and Starting Up
VSDC Video Editor is available at two levels: Free and the $19.99 Pro edition—still far cheaper than most capable video editing software, and the version I reviewed. The paid version adds support for more media types, more advanced settings, hardware acceleration, sub-pixel resolution, and audio waveform editing. It also adds premium support and extra masking and chroma-keying capabilities.
The program runs on Windows XP SP3 through Windows 10 (though no one should be running old, unsupported operating systems!). The installer weighs in at 36 MB—svelte, compared with most video editors, which often top the scales at over a gigabyte. After installation, the program takes up 122 MB on the hard drive. My PC did generate an error message and a reboot, but after that everything worked as expected.
When you first run the application, a welcome panel explains that editing a video project is a simple three-step process of opening a new project, editing, and exporting. The panel links to help websites for each of these steps, rather than showing you how to do them within the program, which would be more helpful.
Interface
As you might expect from such an inexpensive program, VSDC's interface lacks the polish of, say, CyberLink PowerDirector. For one, it didn't accommodate my 4K monitor, instead showing some very tiny interface elements. The center of the program's startup interface shows five square buttons under the Start Project Now group and eight round ones under Get to Know Top Features.
Startup choices include Blank Project, Slideshow, Import Content, Video Capture, and Screen Capture. Features include effects such as color correction and filters, 4K editing, blending, masking, chroma-keying, waveforms, 3D charts, and combining multimedia.
Annoyingly, the program uses Windows Media Player to preview projects; it pops up when you try to view a preview. You can skip to but not scrub to different positions in the editor—that's a huge drawback. It's strange that you can move to points in the video, but not actually play it in the editing window. And unlike almost every video editor, it doesn't let you stop and start playback with the spacebar. Equally annoying is that, as you preview, the insertion point on the timeline doesn't keep sync with what you're watching. There is a separate Cutting and Splitting window that somewhat makes up for this limitation, however, by letting you preview a clip while cutting regions. But even that is awkward to use, making even basic trimming more difficult than in any editor I've used.
Making the interface even more cluttered, along the immediate left side and top of the preview window are Photoshop-like toolbars for things like adding and aligning shapes and text. Missing among all this is a Help feature.
You see any Projects you've created in a left-side panel, with their included Scenes. Instead of the modes you find in most video-editing apps, which take you through the standard progression of source organization, editing, and output tasks, VSDC has tabs along the top in more of an Office app layout. As in an Office app, most of these simply change ribbon tool options, but the Export option changes the main interface for output configuration.
Basic Video Editing
If you choose Import Content from the starting screen, you can only add one file at a time—a limitation I haven't seen in a long time in any video editor. But once you're in a project, you can add multiple files at once. You can't add multiple video clips directly to the timeline, but only through the File sequence wizard, which inserts transitions. These are added to the timeline as a single Sprite, which initially shows up as one track on the timeline, but double-clicking this expands to the full number of component tracks.
Drag-and-drop support is very limited, and not possible within the timeline, though you can drag clips onto the video preview window. I could slide clips back and forth within their tracks, but not move them from track to track. To do this, you need to use arrows on the toolbar above the video preview.
When you create a new project, you can specify the author, resolution, frame rate, and audio format. Next, you see the File's sequence wizard window, which lists transitions for your movie's clips. Only the Perspective set seemed to be 3D, and for some reason the most common transition type—fade—is buried deep in the list. In the same window, you can add multiple clips. But when I did this, the transitions weren't applied in the main timeline.
The auto-contrast, auto-levels, and auto-gamma options didn't improve my image. Nothing like the new dehaze tool in Adobe Premiere Elements, which works well. For manual adjustment, you tap the ellipsis […] next to a setting in a right-side panel. When you do this, a full-screen-width adjustment line appears, which you can add keyframes to gradually increase or decrease the level. Yes, it works, but it takes some sleuthing to figure out.
Fancy Video Effects
Cropping, rotating, transparency, and creating picture-in-picture video effects are quite easy in VSDC. You simply drag the borders where you want for cropping and PiP, and a rotate button makes quick work of turning your video over. But you can't animate PiP, aside from simply moving the image across the screen as time progresses. With PowerDirector, you can use keyframes to move a PiP around and resize gradually.
VSDC's Instagram style filters and old-film styles are also welcome effects, as is the workable chroma-keying. The latter did let me remove a green background, but the results weren't as impressive as with other software like Corel VideoStudio or CyberLink PowerDirector.
A few advanced video techniques that you won't find support for in VSDC include multi-cam, 360 VR, 3D, and motion tracking. In its favor, VSDC accepts and lets you edit 4K video content without any complaints. It does let you create shape masks, which you can even use to pixelate areas in the video and follow motion paths, but the program doesn't automate it or even make it easy.
The text tool is actually WYSIWYG, letting you type over the screen image. A good selection of fonts and colors are at your disposal, but you don't get the more advanced text options found in other software, such as 3D, rotation, and transparent cutout text.
The software also includes a separate Converter tool that offers a large selection of output options for popular devices and online uses, including FLV, MKV, and SWF.
Audio
You can add a soundtrack and apply several audio effects such as fade, chorus, delays, and low-pass filters. There's even a pitch change effect. I got into trouble, however, when I tried adding more than one effect to the audio, and sometimes I just heard silence. You can show audio waveforms on the timeline, but those are not adjustable.
Performance
I tested VSDC's rendering time by creating a movie consisting of four clips of mixed types (some 1080p, some SD, some 4K) with a standard set of transitions and rendered it to 1080p30 MPEG-4 at 15Mbps, H.264 High Profile. Audio was MPEG AAC Audio: 192 Kbps. I tested on the Asus Zen AiO Pro Z240IC running 64-bit Windows 10 Home and sporting a 4K display, 16GB RAM, a quad-core Intel Core i7-6700T CPU, and an Nvidia GeForce GTX 960M discrete graphics card.
The test movie (that played for just under 5 minutes) took 5:05 for VSDC Video Editor to render. That compares with 1 minute and 56 seconds for Pinnacle Studio, 2:34 for PowerDirector, 4 minutes and 20 seconds for Corel VideoStudio, and 5:18 for Adobe Premiere Elements. So VSDC isn't the worst at rendering speed, but it's definitely not a leader. I should also note that the program stopped responding several times during testing and had to be restarted. Not something you want in the middle of building a digital movie.
Sharing and Output
The number of output file options is impressive. VSDC even supports the relatively new H.265 codec, and an illustrated dropdown lets you choose popular devices to target with your output. Motion JPEG and animated GIFs are also options, but Blu-ray and even AVCHD are not options. There's a DVD-burning tool, but you get no help with creating menus or chapters.
You Get What You Pay For
If you really don't want to pay for a more-established video-editing program and can get used to its frustrating and often counterintuitive interface, VSDC Video Editor can do some interesting things with your digital media—if you're very patient. Features that worked well include picture-in-picture, transparency, and the effect filters. But the app was unstable in my testing, and far too many features lag too far behind what more-expensive software offers for me to call this a good choice, even given how cheap it is. For both more ease of use and power, check out our Editors' Choice video editing software, Corel VideoStudio and CyberLink PowerDirector on the PC and Final Cut Pro X on the Mac.
VSDC Video Editor Pro
Bottom Line: If you really don't want to pay much for video editing software, VSDC Video Editor can do a decent amount with your clips, but top products are far easier to use, more stable, and more powerful.
Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus.blog comments powered by DisqusDeveloper(s) | Flash-Integro LLC |
---|---|
Initial release | 2011; 8 years ago |
Stable release | |
Operating system | Windows |
Size | 67.8 Mb |
License | Freeware |
Website | www.videosoftdev.com |
VSDC Free Video Editor is a non-linear editing system (NLE) published by Flash-Integro, LLC. The program is tailored for editing digital video and audio files in various formats including high-definition and ultra-high-definition resolutions, offering professional post production effects, as well as the ability to export in 4k resolution, capture video from screen, record voice, burn discs, save multimedia files to a number of supported formats and publish them on Facebook, Vimeo, YouTube, Instagram, and Twitter.[1]
- 4Effects and transitions
Layout[edit]
VSDC Free Video Editor[2] does not require any specialized hardware to run properly, allowing it to operate on Windows 2000/XP/Vista/7/8/10.
The layout consists of timeline area, scene area, status bar, quick access toolbar, editing tools(standard tools, paper tools, layout tools), command bar with media library (video and audio effects, transitions), properties window and resource window. The timeline area has a by-frame / by-second track and adjustable layer layouts. Wizard sequence feature offers express transition effects and defines sequence of digital objects on the scene.[3]
Importing footage[edit]
A user can either import video, audio or images from computer hard disk drive, or capture video from camera and computer screen.
Supported import formats:
Video formats: WebM, AVI, QuickTime (MP4/M4V, 3GP/2G2, QuickTime File Format), HDVideo/AVCHD (MTS, M2TS, TS, MOD, TOD), Windows Media (WMV, ASF, DVR-MS), DVD/VOB, VCD/SVCD, MPEG/MPEG-1/DAT, Matroska Video (MKV), Real Media Video (RM, RMVB), Flash Video (SWF, FLV), DV, AMV, MTV, NUT, H.264/MPEG-4, MJPEG, H265/HEVC.
Audio formats: MP3/ MP2, WMA, M4A, AAC, FLAC, Ogg, RA, RAM, VOC, WAV, AC3, AIFF, MPA, AU, APE, CUE, CDA.
Image formats: BMP, JPEG/JPG, PNG, PSD, GIF, ICO, CUR.
Editing[4] and output[edit]
Any digital object may be dragged and dropped anywhere on the timeline. Once on the timeline, video can be duplicated, split, cut, muted, cropped, flipped, rotated, played backward, resized, etc., its speed can be slowed down or increased; audio may experience amplitude and delay effects, filters, tempo and rate change, reverse effect, etc.; color corrected and enhanced.[5]VSDC Free Video Editor gives the opportunity to save an output file to a computer hard disk drive with the resolution based on the targeted device (PC, mobile devices, iPhone/iPod, MP3/MP4, Blackberry, etc.), adjust bitrate, framerate, quality or burn to DVD disc.[6]
Supported output formats:
Video formats: AVI, DVD, VCD/SVCD, MPEG, MP4, M4V, MOV, 3GP/3G2, WMV, MKV,RM/RMVB, FLV, SWF, AMV, MTV, Webm
Audio formats: MP3, M4A, AAC, OGG, AMR, WAV
Image formats: BMP, JPEG, PNG, GIF
Supported devices:
Personal computer, various DVD players, iPod/iPhone/iPad/iTunes, cell-phones and smartphones, Samsung, HTC, LG, Huawei, Google, Xiaomi, OnePlus, Sony PSP, PlayStation, Xbox, BlackBerry smartphones, Zune, Archos, iRiver, Creative Zen media players, Windows handheld PC and other portable MP3/MP4 players, action cameras (including GoPro Hero 4 and 5) and all drone types.[7]
VSDC is among the fastest to export a 2.5-minute video shot at 60 fps and 30 fps when compared with other free Windows video editors.[8]
Effects and transitions[edit]
Basic editing[edit]
- Cutting, splitting and merging video and audio tracks;
- Speed change;
- Splitting a video file into audio and video tracks and editing them as separate objects;
- Text and subtitles insertion;
- Integrated video downloader;
- Integrated converter tool supporting more than 20 formats;
- Integrated screen recorder;
- Slide-show wizard offering 70+ transition effects to make one object smoothly go into one another, dissolve or overlap two video or image files;
- Zoom effect - magnify or reduce the view of the image;
- Snapshots - capture a particular moment of a video clip.
Pro features[edit]
Source:[9]
- Gradient tool supported;
- Deinterlacing filter added;
- Blending modes and a mask tool supported;
- Instagram-like filters and Quick styles tool for express color correction[10]
- Color correction (brightness, temperature, contrast, saturation, gamma, etc.) effects - allow adjustment of tonal range, color, and sharpness of video files and images;
- Grayscale effect creates a black and white video image;
- TV effects (Aging TV, Broken TV, Noise TV) – either create an old movie effect adding scratches, noise, shake and dust to video, as if it's being played on an old projector, or make a torn film footage effect when a video's occurring from the bottom part of the screen and is disappearing in the upper part;
- Blur and sharpen effects - visually smooth and soften an image, or make video image better focused;
- Pixelazation effect – imitates enlarging of a digital image further than the resolution of the monitor device;
- Audio amplitude effects (normalization, fading in and out, amplification) helps to correct audio track;
- Delay, time-stretch and reverse effects are tailored to give the audio track the relevant sounding: as if sung by a chorus, stretched in time or played backward;
- Simultaneous work with several audio tracks;
- Sprite option - several objects on the scene can be gathered into a sprite in order to apply needed effects on an entire group of objects and save space on the timeline;
- Movement – the objects on the scene can move following the set trajectory;
- Animation – illusion of motion and change of any static objects on the scene by means of the rapid display of a sequence of these objects;
- Chroma key option - add video overlay half transparent so that only part of it is visible and all the rest disappears to reveal the video underneath;
- 3D charts including Pie, Radar, Torus, Bar, Bubble, Spline, Step Line, Spline area, Funnel, Pyramid, etc. for optimized display of any complex data;
- Copyright information record to the output file;
- Editing of 2k and 4k resolution videos.
- Video stabilization
- Voice Over feature
- 360 video editing
- 3D video editing
References[edit]
- ^Williams, Mike. 'A powerful (but complex) video editor'. www.pcadvisor.com. PCadvisor. Retrieved September 16, 2015.
- ^[1], How to choose reliable and hassle-free video editing software? - PCadvisor.co.uk review, July 2016
- ^VideoHelp.com, Press-release. 'Version 4.0.1'. videohelp.com. Retrieved 20 April 2016.
- ^Mike, Williams. 'Best Video Editing software 2016'. Techradar.com. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
- ^Download.com, staff. 'Editor's review'. download.cnet.com. Retrieved 16 September 2013.
- ^Lynch, James. 'VSDC Free Video Editor, editorial review'. siftware.informer.com. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
- ^The Guardian, What’s the best software for editing drone videos?
- ^Tom's Guide, VSDC Review: Video Editing the Old-Fashioned Way
- ^Widder, Brandon. 'The Best Video Editing Software'. digitaltrends.com. Retrieved 10 October 2015.
- ^Rosenthal, Marshal. 'VSDC Free Video Editing Software Makes PRO Editing Accessible'. videomaker.com. Retrieved 18 October 2016.
External links[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Flash-Integro VSDC Video Editor. |