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post iMovie 6 & IDVD : The Missing Manual (Missing Manual) (Graphic Design)

February 29th, 2008

Filed under: Design — Administrator @ 4:02 pm

While the last version of iMovie gave moviemakers the ability to capture and edit widescreen High Definition Video (HDV) from the new generation of camcorders, iMovie 6 is all about the ease of moviemaking itself. iMovie 6 includes five professionally designed themes with backgrounds, motion graphics, titles, and effects that act as building blocks for your projects. You can preview transitions and stunning new video effects–such as time-lapse video–in real time using the full screen. Or edit audio and add sound effects with a new built-in sound studio. For presenting your movie, Magic iDVD offers easy-to-use themes, including new widescreen options.

Whether you’re a professional or an amateur moviemaker, this is amazing stuff. But if you want to learn the full capabilities of these applications, Apple documentation won’t make the cut. Instead, iMovie 6 & iDVD: The Missing Manual is the ideal third-party authority that covers all of these changes through an objective lens. This witty and entertaining guide from celebrated author David Pogue details every step of iMovie 6 and iDVD production. The book shows you how to:

  • Work on multiple iMovie projects at once and drag & drop clips among them
  • Output your creation to a blog, its own web page, or as a video podcast with iWeb
  • Use “Magic iMovie” to import your video and make a movie for you
  • Integrate with other iLife programs to use songs, photos, and an original soundtrack
  • And a whole lot more

From choosing and using a digital camcorder to burning the finished work onto DVDs, posting it online, or downloading it to an iPod, iMovie 6 & iDVD: The Missing Manual zooms right in on the details in a clear, concise, and understandable manner. The book also provides a firm grounding in basic film technique so that the quality of your video won’t rely entirely on magic.


Customer Review: Worthy Update in the iMovie Series
I want to concentrate mostly on the differences between this edition (iMovie 6) and the previous (iMove HD (5)). Physically, the book is solid. As other reviewers mentioned, the pages are no longer the glossy kind, but they are thick and smooth, and I can’t see any loss in detail in the graphics or screen shots. In addition, since the pages are no longer glossy, they don’t reflect light when the book is sitting on my desk. So, it is easier to read. For my money, this is an improvement. The book is about half a dozen pages lighter, but physically it is slightly thicker, so you know the pages still feel solid not thin or flimsy. One final note, the front cover did separate from the binding after reading it for a couple days. It did not detach in the back. This doesn’t bother me, but I wanted to mention it.

That’s probably way too much on the physical. What’s inside? Pogue and Sadun (who writes the iDVD chapters) have thoroughly updated the book. I’m impressed with the small changes through out to make the entire book better. The book is slightly shorter, as I mentioned, but it is the same font type and size. Obviously, some material has been deleted. Pogue spends less time reviewing the older camcorder technologies. Also a few minor features that have disappeared from iMovie are gone too, like importing songs into your movies directly from CD. Some sections are streamlined, like how the trash (and disk space usage) works. This topic, in particular, used be in various places, but the new book represents a consolidation of that material. In the iDVD section, they’ve eliminated the section on how to customize iDVD and also the themes catalog. The latter was a disappointment to me. I like having a reference all in one place where I can review the various iDVD themes. I also liked the short advice associated with each theme, regarding when to use the theme and when not to (sometimes that advice was “never”).

There is, of course, plenty of new material. All the new features of iMovie 6 are included: a new section on time-lapse recording and importing of footage, the graphic iMovie themes, GarageBand integration and movie scoring, audio “fx” (like reverb, etcetera), new sections on volume adjustments and locking audio clips to video (though these are not new features). Of course, creating video for the iPod is covered. This is new, since the video iPod is new within the last year. He has a small section on video sharing sites (”youtube” anyone?). And, the new “Share” menu is covered, although little on that menu is new, it’s new that it is now in a menu. Finally the appendix on Troubleshooting has been reorganized and updated, although, understandably, much of the advice is the same.

Other new features are covered like full-sized previews or the ability to open mutltiple projects simultaneously, but these are covered as part of existing sections and not new sections. In addition to missing the catalog of iDVD themes, there is no catalog of iMovie themes either. Admittedly, there are only five of them, but why not have these catalogs when the book includes a catalog of the iMovie titles, effects, transitions, and even a list of the new audio effects.

I found a few typos, but they are minor. No mistakes in the actual coverage of the material and that’s a big positive for this book.

Overall, a great improvement on the series. I probably should disclose that this is the fourth book in the iMovie Missing Manual series that I bought (five if you count that I bought two of the last edition), so I guess I would have liked this book regardless … I found each new edition to be extremely helpful in getting me up to speed on Apple’s latest version of iMovie and iDVD. This one is no different. It’s a safe buy. Buy It Now At Amazon!
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