• My UNC Charlotte

  • Directory

  • Campus Events

  • Library

  • Prospective Students

    • About UNC Charlotte
    • Campus Life
    • Admissions
    • Graduate Admissions
  • Faculty and Staff

    • Human Resources
    • Auxiliary Services
    • Inside UNC Charlotte
    • Academic Affairs
  • Current Students

    • Athletics
    • Financial Aid
    • Advising
    • Student Health Center
  • Alumni and Friends

    • Alumni Association
    • Advancement
    • Foundation
    • Make a Gift
τέχνη
τέχνη
Technologies for teaching, learning and research
  • My UNC Charlotte

  • Directory

  • Campus Events

  • Library

  • Prospective Students

    • About UNC Charlotte
    • Campus Life
    • Admissions
    • Graduate Admissions
  • Faculty and Staff

    • Human Resources
    • Auxiliary Services
    • Inside UNC Charlotte
    • Academic Affairs
  • Current Students

    • Athletics
    • Financial Aid
    • Advising
    • Student Health Center
  • Alumni and Friends

    • Alumni Association
    • Advancement
    • Foundation
    • Make a Gift
  • Overview
  • Blog

Filter

  • Technologies

  • Techniques

  • Platforms

  • Disciplines

  • Vendors

Multimedia

Applications for creating, designing, editing, converting, and producing multimedia content including sound, video, print media, presentation, animation, and modeling including applications used to play, edit, create, or record audio for purposes of dictation, music, broadcast, or otherwise and applications used to create, edit, or produce video content. Software ranges from simple clip editor tools, to professional video editing software, to DVD production tools. Finally, this category includes software for capturing. Capture software allows you to get a snapshot of something. For example, you could get a snapshot of your computer screen at a particular moment in time or for a period of time. This snapshot could be an image (screenshot) or video (screencast).

There is also capture software designed for capturing presentations, lectures and events

After Effects

November 20, 2014 by Andy Voelker
Categories: Analysis & ModelingDesign & VisualizationMultimedia

after-effect

Availability:
Comparable: Blender

Adobe After Effects is a digital motion graphics, visual effects and compositing app developed by Adobe Systems used in the post-production process of filmmaking and television production. After Effects can also be used as a basic non-linear editor and a media transcoder.

Adobe After Effects is primarily used for creating motion graphics and visual effects. After Effects allows users to animate, alter and composite media in 2D and 3D space with various built-in tools and third party plug-ins, as well as individual attention to variables like parallax and user-adjustable angle of observation.

After Effects and some non-linear editing systems (NLEs) are layer-oriented, meaning that each individual media object (video clip, audio clip, still image, etc.) occupies its own track. In contrast, other NLEs use a system where individual media objects can occupy the same track as long as they do not overlap in time. This track-oriented system is more suited for editing and can keep project files much more concise. The layer-oriented system that After Effects adopts is suited for extensive effects work and keyframing. Although other compositing packages, especially ones that employ tree or node workflows, such as Nukeand eyeon Fusion are better suited to manage large volumes of objects within a composite, After Effects is able to counter the clutter somewhat by selectively hiding layers (using the Shy switch) or by grouping them into pre-compositions.

The main interface consists of several panels (windows in versions prior to After Effects 7.0). Three of the most commonly used panels are the Project panel, the Composition panel, and the Timeline panel. The Project panel acts as a bin to import stills, video, and audio footage items. Footage items in the Project panel are used in the Timeline panel, where layer order and timing can be adjusted. The items visible at the current time marker are displayed in the Composition panel.

After Effects shares many features with other Adobe programs, such as creating circles, squares and free form shapes that are defined by bezier curves. Like Photoshop and Illustrator, After Effects can import and manipulate many image formats, and filters and adjustments can be added.

After Effects integrates with other Adobe software titles such as Illustrator, Photoshop, Premiere Pro, Encore, Flash, and third-party 3D programs like Cinema 4D, Lightwave 3D, and Autodesk 3ds Max.

Tags: video

Aperture

December 11, 2014 by Andy Voelker
Categories: Design & VisualizationMultimedia

Apple_Aperture_logo_tn

Availability: Discontinued by publisher
Comparable: Lightroom,  Picasa,

Aperture is a photo editing and management computer program developed by Apple Inc. for the OS X operating system, first released in 2005, and currently available in its App Store. The software handles a number of tasks common in post-production work such as importing and organizing image files, applying corrective adjustments, displaying slideshows, and printing photographs.

Features of Aperture include non-destructive editing, organization of photographs by keyword, faces (using face detection and recognition), and places (using GPS metadata embedded in image files), brushes for applying effects (such as dodge and burn, skin smoothing, and polarization), and exporting to several popular websites, including Flickr, Facebook, SmugMug, and Apple’s iCloud. The program has been widely reviewed by independent parties.

Apple discontinued listing Aperture in the Mac App Store on April 8, 2015. Aperture is being replaced with Photos for OS X.

Atlas Ti

April 04, 2017 by Laurie Parker
Categories: Analysis & ModelingMultimedia
Availability: Download
Comparable: Nvivo, MaxQDA

Atlas Ti logoAtlas Ti is a program used for qualitative research or qualitative data analysis. The software is used to uncover and analyze complex phenomena hidden in unstructured data. Users can extract, categorize, and interlink data segments from multiple source documents, audio clips or photos.

« Older Posts
Newer Posts »

Click for more  

UNC Charlotte Homepage

Campus Links

  • Alerts
  • Jobs
  • Make a Gift
  • Maps / Directions
  • Accessibility

Resources

  • Alumni & Friends
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Prospective Students
  • Community
  • Current Students
  • Parents and Family

Stay In Touch

facebook instagram flickr linkedin twitter youtube maps

The University of North Carolina at Charlotte
9201 University City Blvd, Charlotte, NC 28223-0001
704-687-8622

© 2017 UNC Charlotte | All Rights Reserved
Contact Us | Terms of Use | University Policies
Skip to toolbar
  • Log In