See the release notes for full details (opens in new tab). ![]() The latest version of VideoPad Video Editor features several enhancements to the 360-degree video mode, including the ability to add a 2D video or picture to a 360-degree compilation, and a scale parameter for the 360-degree effect. If you’re in the market for a new video editor but don’t need the raw power of a professional-grade program like Lightworks, VideoPad Video Editor is perfect. There are also compatible presets available for selected smartphones and mobile video players. Burn your finished videos to DVD, save them to your hard drive in one of several available formats or share them directly to YouTube or Facebook. Mac OS X's Automator utility offers a scriptless way to automate repetitive tasks.There are also manual settings for refining brightness, saturation and color – ideal if you’re using video clips that were shot in different lighting conditions and want to give them a consistent look. Mac OS X’s Automator utility offers a scriptless way to automate repetitive tasks. New, pre-defined templates and a better Services menu in the latest version allows you to be even more creative with setting up your own workflows. The Automator utility in Mac OS X allows you to automate repetitive tasks (workflows) by a simple drag-and-drop process, rather than having to use a script.The new Automator in Mac OS X 10.6 has a new templates-based system that allows you to select from a few pre-defined templates for your new workflows. These include the standard Workflow and Application types, but also include iCal Alarm, Image Capture Plugin, Print Plugin, and a Services template. While all of these are interesting (i.e., the Print Plugin allows you to automatically manipulate data sent to the printer), the Services type is what we want to look at.ĭue to the redesign and increased usability of the Services menu, the Services workflow can really allow for some creative things. When creating a new Services workflow, the first thing you determine is the workflow’s context. You can specify what application the workflow should receive input from and specify what type of input it will receive (which allows you to set the context and also gives clues as to what the Services menu differentiates as far as context goes). For instance, a few of the input types include text, dates, and email addresses as a text input, and PDF files, image files, or audio files as file/folder types (there are more distinctions available than just these). Once you’ve set the context, you create the workflow as you would any other Automator workflow. For a real quick demonstration, select “text” for what the Service receives and then from the Automator library select the “Text” section. Drag the “Speak Text” action over to the workflow and then save the workflow. When you save it, Automator will save the workflow in the ~/Library/Services/ directory (so you can remove those you no longer want or edit those you need to change). Next, highlight some text from a document, right-click on it and from the Services menu select what you saved as the Services workflow and listen as the computer reads to you the text you highlighted. As you can see, it is very simple to create a new Automator-based Service. While this example is quite quick and perhaps a little cheesy, it illustrates how quickly you can create a workflow, and how easily. With this sort of power, you can create a Services menu that will allow you to select a PDF, use the Watermark PDF Documents action to place a watermark on the document, then create an email with the file as an attachment. ![]() ![]() Or you can select text and run it through a shell script and replace the highlighted text with the new output (i.e., sorting or encrypting text).
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