Interactive e-learning incorporating online or DVD-based video is all the rage in training circles these days. So how about creating your own customized IT department training videos in-house? You can, with the remarkably inexpensive and easy-to-use PC-based video production tools we tested recently.
Even better, you can take the same tools home and turn your dull-as-ditch-water home videos into filmic masterpieces.
What do you need? It starts with a DV (digital video) camcorder. Even low-end consumer models ($900 to $1,200) can produce near-broadcast quality video. (That’s can produce – if you use them properly.) All the usual suspects, including Canon, Sony and JVC, offer multiple DV models.
Then you need a Firewire (aka IEEE 1394) port on a PC to get the raw video into the computer to edit it. Some PC models and many Macs, including laptops, have Firewire ports built in now. Or you can install an add-in card for $100 to $200.
Firewire lets you import full-screen, full-motion video, and export the edited movie when you’re finished, without losing any of the superb video quality from the camcorder.
To edit out the bloopers, order the shots, add titles and slick transitions between scenes and maybe even a voice-over or musical sound track, you’ll need video-editing software. Plus if you want to make your own DVDs (using a CD burner), you’ll need software for that too.
We looked at two consumer video editing kits that include Firewire card and bundled software: